Extractions: WRITERS WHOSE NAMES START WITH C Caceres, Esther de (1902-1971) Caddy, Caroline Cade, Katharine Penelope [aka Katharine Burdekin; Murray Constantine; Kay Burdekin] (1896-1963) Cade, Miltona Mirkin [aka Toni Cade Bambara] ( Cadell, Jessie (1844-1884) Cadham, Joan Eyolfson (fl.2002) Cadieux, Chantal (1967-) ; In French Cadigan, Pat Cady, Harriette Emilie (1848-1941) Caesar, Mary (1677-1741) Caffyn, Kathleen [aka Iota] (1853-1926) Caffyn, Mrs. Mannington (fl.1860)
Title O8 TITLE Sartre a life / Annie Cohen-Solal BOOK-ID 010607388 Call-NO 327.4705Y15NO O-35 TITLE Japan and the United States, 1853-1921 / by Payson J. Treat http://www.meijigakuin.ac.jp/tosho/hotta_col.html
Brooklyn Public Library /All Locations Author, Call, Annie Payson, 18531940. Title, A man of the world, by Annie PaysonCall. Pub info, Boston, Little, Brown, and company, 1905. LOCATION, Call , STATUS. http://catalog.brooklynpubliclibrary.org:90/kids/10,376/search/c177 C319 C/c177
Extractions: This is one of a series of files in a web-base finding aid to the many vital events recorded in the San Francisco Call during calendar years 1869-1895. Most events are for the San Francisco California area - births, marriages, and deaths. However many records are for events throughout California and beyond which were of interest to residents of San Francisco. Deaths at sea were also reported by the ships coming into the port of San Francisco.
Villard, Oswald Garrison, 1872-1949. Papers: Guide. Repository Houghton Library, Harvard College Library, Harvard University. Location b. Call No. MS Am 1323 483) Call, Annie Payson, 1853 2 letters from; 1900 http://oasis.harvard.edu/html/hou00082.html
Extractions: Bequest of Oswald Garrison Villard; received: 1949. Villard, a journalist and author, was president of the New York Evening Post (1897-1918), editor and owner of The Nation (1918-1932), publisher and contributing editor of The Nation (1932-1935), a founder of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and of Yachting Magazine, and owner of the Nautical Gazette. His father was Henry Villard, railroad promoter and financier; his mother was Fanny Garrison Villard, social reformer, suffragist, and philanthropist; and his grandfather was the abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison. Includes the following series: Over half the collection consists of professional correspondence concerning The Nation, The New York Evening Post, and the progressive political issues with which Villard was involved. Also contains correspondence with family members, much of it pertaining to his work or business affairs; minutes, ledgers, financial reports, and stockbooks of The Evening Post and some business records of The Nation; diaries, 1884-1941, and datebooks; 15 boxes of speeches; scrapbooks of Villard's articles; and notes and manuscripts for his various writing projects in history and biography. Includes material on various peace societies, civil liberties, blacks in Harlem, the NAACP, the blockade during the Civil War, Puerto Rico, and The New York Philharmonic. Also contains drafts and manuscripts of his father's memoirs, tributes to his mother and grandfather, family records, photographs, medals, memorabilia, clippings, and printed material.
Extractions: Processing Information: This important correspondence was bequeathed to Harvard University by Amy Lowell, and was received by the Poetry Room of the Widener Library shortly after Miss Lowell's death in 1925. At that time a checklist was made of the letters written to Amy Lowell, citing author, number of titles, and inclusive dates of the letters.
Elizabeth Payson Prentiss 26 October 1818, to Edward and Ann Payson, and grew There they had two children, Annie(born in 1846) and Prentiss accepted a Call to a Presbyterian church in http://www.readseries.com/auth-oz/prentiss.html
Extractions: Like Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, her contemporary, Prentiss was the daughter of a Congregational minister whose New England ancestry dated back to the seventeenth century. Also like Phelps, unfortunately, she spent much of her life plagued by ill health, a condition exacerbated by several tragic losses during the early years of her married life. From 1838-1844, Prentiss taught school, first at home for two years, and then at a girls' school in Richmond, Virginia. During the latter part of this period, she apparently met or became romatically involved with her future husband, and on 16 April 1845, she married George Lewis Prentiss, a Congregational minister. The couple lived in New Bedford, Massachusetts, for several years. There they had two children, Annie (born in 1846) and Eddy (born in 1848). For the first year of his life, Eddy's health was so poor that he was not expected to live; indeed, when he recovered, Prentiss wrote in her journal, "To me he never seemed the same child. . . . I often said afterward that a little stranger was running about my nursery, not mine, but God's." During this period (actually, from about 1840 until 1853), Prentiss's only writing was apparently in voluminous correspondence and journals, including one preserving a detailed account of Eddy's days.
WebGED: The Bement Family Data Page 601602, Call Number CS71.G657 Albert Henry Bement married and moved to Payson, Utahto farm, but He may have married (2) Annie B. Thomason as records from the http://www.bementfamily.com/webged/bement.wbg/wga8.html
LIBINDEX.C (Word4) Call, Annie Payson POWER THROUGH REPOSE vi+7201 1911 ( New edition with additions 2vi+420 1853 Edinburgh Thomas Constable/LondonHamilton Adams ex-Advocates http://www.staffs.ac.uk/schools/sciences/psychology/chop/author/c-e_psy.html
Extractions: C CAMPBELL, Joseph THE HERO WITH A THOUSAND FACES xxiii+416 24 plates 1968 (2nd ed.1st-1949, rep.63,61) Princeton NJ:PUP for Bollingen Foundation Bollingen Series XVII d/w CANTER, David (ed) FIRES AND HUMAN BEHAVIOUR xviii+338 1986 Chichester etc.:Wiley CANTRIL, Hadley THE PSYCHOLOGY OF SOCIAL MOVEMENTS xv+274 1942 NY:Wiley CANTRIL, Hadley (ed.) TENSIONS THAT CAUSE WARS Common statement and individual papers by a group of social scientists brought together by UNESCO 303 1950 Urbana Ill.: U.Illinois Press CANTRIL, Hadley UNDERSTANDING MAN'S SOCIAL BEHAVIOR Preliminary Notes x+75 1947 Princeton NJ: Office of Public Opnion Research p/b CAPLAN, Gerald AN APPROACH TO COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH ix+262 1961 London: Tavistock d/w CAPLAN, Gerald with supplementary chapters by Virginia Insley CONCEPTS OF MENTAL HEALTH AND CONSULTATION Their pplication in Public Health and Social Work viii+269 1959 DC: U.S.Dept. of Health, Education and Welfare CAPLAN, Gerald PRINCIPLES OF PREVENTIVE PSYCHIATRY xiii+304 1964 London:Tavistock d/w CARDWELL, D.S.L. THE ORGANISATION OF SCIENCE IN ENGLAND ix+204 1957 London: Heinemann d/w
Extractions: The Huntting - Rudd papers were given to the Schlesinger Library in April and August 1977 by Bessie Huntting Rudd. Additional papers were given in October 1978 by Rhode Island Hospital Trust National Bank, in Feb. 1979 by Caroline D. Bain, and in April 1979 by Mary Dwight (Rudd) Drever.. The collection centers on the widow and children of Gilbert Cooper Huntting (1805-1849), members of a prosperous whaling family of Sag Harbor, Long Island, New York: Philena (Slate) Huntting (1808-1890), Bessie Huntting (1831-1862), Mary Huntting (1836-1869), Harriet Huntting (1839-1864), Gilbert Huntting (b. 1844), and Robert Minturn Huntting (b. 1847). It also includes papers of the family of Edward Payson Rudd (1833-1861), husband of Bessie Huntting, and of the related Dwight family (see Huntting, Rudd and Dwight family charts). At GCH's death in 1849, Bessie assumed responsibility for the affairs of her family, even though she was often absent from Sag Harbor. She graduated form Brooklyn Female Academy in 1849 and taught school for two years in Philadelphia. In 1853-1854 she taught in Montrose, Pennsylvania, where she considered marrying Reverend Henry Jessup and going abroad with him as a missionary. Family responsibility prevailed and she returned home and taught in the Sag Harbor school. Each sibling in turn went away to school and all the family made frequent visits to relatives and friends (most often in Brooklyn and New York City).
LDSEP: Lars Alexander Justesen (1852-1853) Others went back to Payson, Provo and Salt Lake to earn It is not known what happenedto Annie Olsen Justesen t been for these d Mormons as you Call them, we http://www.ldsep.org/denmark/sjael/cop/52lajust.htm
Extractions: [Submitted by: Sherrie Wieland, email: swieland@jeffnet.org Life and Times of Lars Alexander Justesen (1818-1868) and His Wife Karen (Caroline) Rasmussen by Elaine Justesen, A.G. Lars Alexander Justesen was born on 16 November 1818 and christened in the church at Gundslev, Denmark. Gundslev is a small village located on the Island of Falster in the Kingdom of Denmark. The State Church of the country was the Lutheran Church. Every citizen was a member. Lars was the son of Just Larsen and Dorothy Clausdatter. The patronymic system of naming was in effect in Denmark at the time of the birth of Lars. Since that time people have been required to accept a standard surname. With the patronymic system, each child received a given name chosen by its parents, while the surname was taken from the father's given name. Hence Justesen meaning the son of Just, and Dorothy the datter [Danish spelling] of Claus. There is not much information concerning the boyhood of Lars. He would have been reared on a farm, as the area is still farm country today. Lars was the second child and only son of his parents. He had four sisters. Karen Rasmusdatter was born on the farm Ravnstrup in the parish of Nørre Kirkeby. This parish is located next to Gundslev. She was the daughter of Karen Hemmingsdatter and Rasmus Hansen Møller. Her parents were not married. Just before Karen was 2 years old her mother married Anders Simonsen and in later years Karen was sealed to her mother and Anders. The genealogy has been traced through the sealing line.
BallAut6A - Name Index - Generated By Ancestral Quest STAMPLEY, Bobby Kent b.1933 Of Call, , Texas STAMPLEY NY TANNER, Freeman Rasmussenb.1877 - Payson, Utah, Utah TAYLOR, Angela M. - Living TAYLOR, Annie Eliza m http://www.c-zone.net/autrey/findex6.htm
BallAut6A - Name Index - Generated By Ancestral Quest Call. Call, Carole Elane Living. CALVERT. COUCH. COUCH, Annie Laura b.1905 -. COWAN. CRANDALL.CRANDALL, Hortense m.1900 - Payson, Ut, Ut CRANDALL, Irma b.1908 -. http://www.c-zone.net/autrey/findex2.htm
Tanner Family Dispersion the veterans stood in their ranks and took a roll Call. He married Annie Clark Brownin 1853 in New York Tanners invited him to their reunion in Payson in 1884 http://www.concentric.net/~Ssbray/tanndisp.htm
Extractions: President Young and party accepted an invitation to attend a farewell meeting, and the president wrote the following in his journal: "We held a meeting at Payson on the 23rd (March 1851). President Heber C. Kimball and Elders Charles C. Rich, Amasa M. Lyman and R. McBride addressed the people. I was sick at the sight of so many of the Saints running to California, chiefly after the god of this world, and was unable to address them." The San Bernardino settlement did well after initial delays in buying the San Bernardino rancho land, and some minor Indian troubles. California proved to be such a lure to many that President Young found it necessary to strongly express his feelings time and again, against the Saints from Utah moving there. In Feb. 1853 the First Presidency published in the Deseret News an article clarifying their opposition to the Saints "running off to California," and said that ONLY those few who were sent there on missions or business did so legitimately; the rest were forsaking the cause of Zion ... the San Bernardino area was so pleasant that even many of the converts from Australia who landed by ship in southern California were choosing to remain there rather than coming up to Utah, defeating the purpose of the San Bernardino mission in the first place. While they were in California, the Tanner boys as usual found enterprises to keep them busy. After building the fort, homes, plowing and planting, etc., they entered the horse trading business. Myron, Seth, Freeman, and Joseph pooled their funds and purchased a farm which they stocked with horses and cattle. They also set up a store where they did "trading" (money being scarce in those days, most often business was done by bartering and trading goods and livestock). Horses were plentiful in California, and many ran in wild bands; these the Tanner boys caught and tamed; other horses they bought or traded for.
Hill - Name Index - Generated By Personal Ancestral File ANDREWS, Annie W b.1890 Of, , , UTAH. Ethel Vententia b.1886 - Bountiful, Davis,UTAH Call, Roscoe Cyril b ELMER, Rachel Lucinda b.1858 - , Payson, UTAH, UTAH. http://www.geocities.com/hillfamilyhistory/index3.htm
Oldqueries he was married to Laura Syme, and Annie Elizabeth Christensen. Married to Ellen S.Flanders Died 1879 Payson city then Call me at 801257-6371, and I will tell http://www.lofthouse.com/boxelder/oldqueries.htm
Charles Dixon Genealogy Mary Laura Chapman 5 George Ephraim Chapman 5 Martin Call Chapman 4 Daly b in PaysonCity, Utah d in Payson City, Utah 5 William C. Daly 5 Annie A. Daly http://users.erols.com/montemac/CharlesDixon.html
Marriages In Andover 1838. Call, Joseph L. Franklin, SEVERANCE, Annie, Franklin, 29 Sep 1861.CAMPBELL 1894. CLAY, Payson R. Andover, AVERY, Lucy B. Northfield, 9 Nov 1891. http://www.usgennet.org/usa/nh/state/merrimack/main/andover_marr.html
Extractions: SOURCE: History of the Town of Andover, New Hampshire, 1751-1906; by John R. Eastman; Rumford Printing Company, Concord, NH, 1910; pp. 278-289. The following data are mostly taken from the town records. A considerable number of records, however, have been obtained from the diaries of Rev. Josiah Badcock, and other ministers. It is highly probably that of many marriages, no record, public or private, was ever made, especially those performed by justices of the peace. It is a serious misfortune that many of the town records of marriages between 1844 and 1880 have been lost. Although most of the following data can be found scattered throughout the genealogical section, this condensed record is published as a source of ready and valuable information. GROOM RESIDENCE BRIDE RESIDENCE DATE ABBOTT, Rufus Concord LADD, Susan H. Concord 19 Jun 1845 ADAMS, John L. Fishersfield FELCH, Jane Fishersfield 11 Jun 1832 ANDREWS, Frank D. Andover KNOWLTON, Mary F. Sutton 1 Jan 1890 APPLETON, Fred S. Andover SMITH, Minnie J. Andover 3 Sep 1900 APPLETON, Scott J.
WebGED: Werrett & Variations Data Page Utah, Utah, USA d. 3 JAN 1980 in Payson, Utah, Utah Friends may Call at the WalkerMortuary in Spanish Fork daughter of Edgar Alfred HUNT Louisa Annie McARDLE. http://www.ritter.demon.co.uk/Genealogy/wga48.html