JAMES OF WILLIAM OF NEWCASTLE COUNTY, DEL JAMES OF William OF NEWCASTLE COUNTY, DEL. 371. and two died in infancy, nine in all. She is still living (1877) in Clarion County, but a few miles from where she was born. Her children all remain in http://www.brightok.net/~lguthrie/bookii-370.htm
Extractions: and two died in infancy, nine in all. She is still living (1877) in Clarion County, but a few miles from where she was born. Her children all remain in Clarion County." William Maffett, seventh child of William Maffett and Mary Guthrie, never married. He lived on and farmed a part of the old Maffett homestead during his life. Elizabeth Maffett, eighth child of William Maffett and Mary Guthrie, married John Beatty. They live in Strattonville; had no children. James Maffett, ninth child of William Maffett and Mary Guthrie, married Elizabeth Rhodes. They lived on a part of the old Maffett homestead. They had five children, one of whom died in infancy. Anaseneth Maffett, tenth child of William Maffett and Mary Guthrie, never married. She lived with her brother William on the old home place, where she died 187 Thompson Maffett, eleventh child of William Maffett and Mary Guthrie, married Mary Andrews. They raised a family of five children. In 187- the family moved to the state of Indiana. Kezia Maffett, twelfth and youngest child of William Maffett and Mary Guthrie, never married. She kept house for her brother William on the old home place. Joseph Guthrie, (p. 357) eighth and youngest child of William Guthrie and Mary Welch, became a surveyor. He remained in Westmoreland County and laid out the town of New Derry on that portion of his father's estate which fell to him.' He married Mary Jane
Extractions: D.C. Rose , so one may take that as the opening of the season there. Wilde himself managed a few days in Trouville and Le Havre in June 1899. Dieppe too had its season (June to October), its Casino took his annual holiday there, where 'always an expansive man, he seemed to expand beyond measure' Others staying at Dieppe in the summer of 1893 were D.S. MacColl, the Beardsleys, R.A.M. Stevenson, James Guthrie, Charles Furse, Alfred Thornton, and the editor of The Yellow Book , Henry Harland . In August 1895, Charles Conder, Beardsley and Arthur Symons were all in Dieppe. Symons and Beardsley visited Dumas at Puy, Blanche saw Symons and Beardsley every day. The wellknown portrait of the latter by Blanche dates to this occasion. 'It was at Dieppe that The Savoy was really planned,' wrote Symons of the successor to The Yellow Book Dieppe was in fact a curious mixture of the Bohemian and the conventional. 'A curious, pathetic town is Dieppe,' wrote George Moore, 'full of nuns and pigeons, old gables and strange dormer windows.' and despite her cleaning up his studio in a way reminiscent of Christine Hallgrain cleaning up the studio of Claude Lantier ) Sickert had his mutable side A.S. Hartrick described him as 'something of a chameleon'