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56251 | Wikipedia.com Louise Bryant Early life Bryant was born Anna Louisa Mohan in San Francisco, California. Herfather, Hugh Mohan was a coal miner from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, whomade his way west with the Railroad crews. Her mother remarriedSheridan Bryant and Louise took her stepfather's name. The familymoved to Nevada where Louise was a student at the University ofNevada. She later moved to the University of Oregon in Eugene. Hersenior thesis was about the Modoc Indian War of Southern Oregon andwas completed in 1908. Bryant returned to San Francisco to become ajournalist after graduation but was soon nudged, for financialreasons, to teach "school" in Salinas, California in her words "in aremote area, forty miles from a train station". She also wrote that"Mexicans and Spaniards are my students."[2] She moved back to Oregonand became involved with the Suffrage Movement in Portland, worked forthe Spectator, and married Paul Trullinger. (Internet extraction provided by David H. Drollinger 3 Feb 2012) | MNU, Unknown (I19999)
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56252 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Trullinger, Angela Jolene (I19316)
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56253 | wikipedia.org/wiki/Louise_Bryant Louise Bryant (photo of Louise attached to this website) Louise Bryant (December 5, 1885 - January 6, 1936) was an American journalist and writer. She was best known for her Marxist and anarchist beliefs and her essays on radical political and feminist themes. Bryant published articles in several radical left journals during her life, including Alexander Berkman's The Blast. [1] Early life Bryant was born Anna Louisa Mohan in San Francisco, California. Her father, Hugh Mohan was a coal miner from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, who made his way west with the Railroad crews. Her mother remarried Sheridan Bryant and Louise took her stepfather's name. The family moved to Nevada where Louise was a student at the University of Nevada. She later moved to the University of Oregon in Eugene. Her senior thesis was about the Modoc Indian War of Southern Oregon and was completed in 1908. Bryant returned to San Francisco to become a journalist after graduation but was soon nudged, for financial reasons, to teach "school" in Salinas, California in her words "in a remote area, forty miles from a train station". She also wrote that "Mexicans and Spaniards are my students."[2] She moved back to Oregon and became involved with the Suffrage Movement in Portland, worked for the Spectator, and married Paul Trullinger. Career Bryant met journalist John Reed in Portland, Oregon while he was visiting his family after attending Harvard and moving in "Radical" circles of the Village in New York CIty. Louise moved with him to New York City, and amicably divorced Trullinger several months later. Reed and Bryant together traveled to Russia in 1917 where they witnessed the October Revolution. Both published books about the event, Reed's Ten Days that Shook the World and Bryant's Six Red Months in Russia. Bryant was with Reed when he died of typhus in 1920. He is one of three Americans to be buried at the Kremlin in Moscow. In a 1920 letter to a friend, Bryant spoke of her typhus-stricken husband's death in Moscow and how she watched Soviets pass his grave: "I have been there in the busy afternoon when all Russia hurries by, "she wrote. "Once some of the soldiers came over to the grave. They took off their hats and spoke very reverently: 'What a good fellow he was!' said one. 'He came all the way across the world for us. He was one of ours.'" Louise Bryant continued to work following her second husband's death and became a leading reporter for the Hearst newspaper chain. After Reed's death, Bryant married William C. Bullitt in early 1924. The couple had one child, Anne. Becoming ill with what was diagnosed in 1928 as adiposis dolorosa, "Dercum's Disease", and despite several treatments including stays at Dr. Dengler's Sanatorium in Baden Baden, Germany and a few sessions with Sigmund Freud[3] in 1929, Bryant continued efforts to be a wife, mother, and writer. Bullitt divorced Bryant in 1930, upon learning of her alleged lesbian affairs in Paris. Death and legacy Bryant died on Jan. 6, 1936 of a brain hemorrhage in Paris and is buried in Des Gonards Cemetery in Versailles, France[1]. Upon her death, Bryant's personal papers were transferred to Bullitt, where they remained until their daughter Anne donated Bullitt's papers to his alma mater Yale University in 2004. Upon preparing them for transport to Yale, Bryant's papers were discovered amidst Bullitt's, and they currently reside in Sterling Memorial Library. Oregon Cultural Heritage Commission By Mary Dearborn © 2002 Louise Bryant's name is nearly forgotten in American history books, effaced by any number of historians for a wide variety of reasons. Much information about the life of this remarkable and courageous journalist, who carved out a vivid and extraordinary life for herself, has nearly been lost to the record. Many of the facts of her life are unknown, partly because, in re-creating herself as a twentieth-century American heroine, she mythologized her past, concealing some details and omitting or changing others. She often gave her birth date as December 5, 1885 - though that cannot be verified, because her record did not survive the 1906 San Francisco earthquake - and she often changed the date to present herself as younger than she was. On her father's side, she was descended from Irish immigrants who settled in the coal mining hills of western Pennsylvania; her father, Hugh Mohan, was a minor politician, journalist, and orator. She was brought up in and near Reno, Nevada, where her mother had relocated because of its proximity to her own stepfather, James Say, at whose ranch Louise spent several years as a little girl, largely on her own, riding horses and participating in ranch life. Her parents divorced when she was four, but she claimed that her father died then. She may in fact have believed it. Her mother remarried Sheridan Bryant whose name Louise adopted; he was a stable railroad man. Bryant's last two years in high school were given accreditation for attendance at the University of Nevada. She turned to teaching for a time before following a sister and brother northward, where she enrolled at the University of Oregon. A good student, known as a considerable flirt, she had grown into a beautiful woman, with auburn hair, creamy skin, and very long lashes of which she was vain. Bryant wrote a senior thesis on the Modoc Indian Wars and graduated in 1909. Casting about for work, she landed a job in Portland at a frivolous society magazine, the Spectator. There she rose from an illustrator - she showed talent, and could have become a good commercial artist - to the position of society editor. She married a handsome blond dentist named Paul Trullinger of a good family. He was not the respectable, bourgeois professional man he seemed; they took up residence in a houseboat on the Willamette. On Friday afternoons Trullinger and his colleagues threw martini parties in their waiting rooms and invited their wives, the party often repairing to Paul's offices to inhale ether. But Trullinger became more staid as time went on, and established Bryant in a series of ever-more-respectable homes. Bryant chafed at this, and, with the strong encouragement of a new friend, the poet Sara Bard Field, became an active suffragist. Field commented at the time on Bryant's predicament: "I opened the door to her ability. Louise hated housework. It seemed that Louise felt she was condemned to wash windows, punch up pillows all day long. I said to her, 'Well, yes, if you are not very much in love and trying to make a lovely home, that is hard for a girl of your brains.' She was not in love with her husband?and she didn't feel she was accomplishing the work she could do." The arrival of John Reed into her life must have seemed a godsend. She had heard of him before they met; once, on a streetcar, she grew so mesmerized reading his story in Metropolitan magazine that she read on past her stop, and suddenly realized she had fallen in love with the man who'd written it. John Reed, born in 1887, was not exactly Portland's favorite son, though his family was eminently respectable, one of the most prominent in Portland. Descended from a frontier capitalist on his mother's side, Reed's father was a local businessman. Jack, as he was known, had a lackluster existence in Portland schools - his childhood was marked by long periods of poor health - but made his way to Morristown Academy in the East, and from there to Harvard, where he thrived. Though he was a small fish in a big pond, and never really accepted by the Eastern prep school students, he went out for countless activities, most notably the Socialist Club. Reed's classmates were part of a new generation that fought off the constraints of convention, struggling to transform themselves and the world around them. After his graduation Reed wisely sought out the journalist and reformer Lincoln Steffens for guidance, who provided this remarkable comment of Reed as he appeared then: When Jack Reed came, big and growing, handsome outside and beautiful inside, when that boy came to New York, it seemed to me I had never seen anything so near to pure joy. No ray of sunshine, no drop of foam, no young animal, bird or fish, and no star, was as happy as that boy was. If only we could keep him so, we might have a poet at last who would see and sing nothing but joy. When Steffens asked what he wanted to do, Reed replied that he didn't know, except that he wanted to write. "Steffens looked at me with that lovely smile," Reed remembered, "and answered, 'You can do anything you want to.' " Reed embarked on a vigorous career of journalism and activism. He helped stage the Paterson Silk Worker's Pageant in Madison Square Garden, following a strike by those workers in the course of which Reed was thrown in jail. He covered Pancho Villa and the Mexican Revolution in 1914 for a series of articles in the Metropolitan, which became the book Insurgent Mexico. He was sowing his oats liberally as well, first in an engagement with a French girl and later in a liaison with celebrated hostess Mabel Dodge. All that was behind him, however, when he returned to Portland in the summer of 1914 and he met Bryant. Louise, for her part, felt as if she had been waiting for him all her life. "I always wanted," she later remembered, "somebody who wouldn't care when you went to bed or what hour you got up, and who lived in the way Jack did." Louise watched Jack speak that summer, and was introduced to him formally, but it was not until the following summer, on another of Reed's visits home, that they became lovers. Reed left for New York, as planned, just after Christmas - but he had left Bryant train fare East, and she departed on New Year's Eve. Meanwhile, Reed had written to a friend while on the train: This is to say, chiefly, that I have fallen in love and I think I've found her at last? She's wild and brave and straight, and graceful and lovely to look at. A lover of all adventure of spirit and of mind, a result with the most silver scorn of changelessness or fixity. Refuses to be bound, or to bound? And in this spiritual vacuum, this unfertilized soil, she has grown (how, I can't imagine) into an artist, a joyous, rampant individualist, a poet and revolutionary. In New York, Bryant began writing for The Masses, developing her revolutionary views and finding her voice. Reed was away a lot, which was difficult, and, as both believed in free love, jealousies often surfaced. But they remained terribly in love. She and Reed shared a thrilling summer in Provincetown, Massachusetts, in 1916 when George Cram "Jig" Cook and his wife Susan Glaspell, formed the Provincetown Players, arguably the beginning of modern theatre in the U.S. Reed, Bryant, and Eugene O'Neill each had dramatic work staged in Provincetown's first season. Her brief affair with O'Neill further complicated all their lives. A photograph of Bryant in the dunes taken that summer shows a naked and lovely woman lying on the sand, her face thrust ecstatically up toward the sun, her long, unruly hair streaming behind her. On their return they bought a little cottage outside the city in Croton-on-Hudson, on a road the locals called "Red Hill," because of the radicals who peopled it. But trouble loomed: Reed had to have a kidney removed. Almost on the eve of the operation, he and Bryant married and Reed put the house in her name, as the operation was life-threatening. On his safe return, he found that Bryant had suffered gynecological problems, possibly an abortion or a venereal disease. When he retaliated with an affair, a hurt Bryant got credentialed by the newly formed Bell Syndicate and sailed for France to cover the Great War. While she landed no journalistic coups there, she acquired new confidence, shifting for herself professionally. When she returned Reed met her at the dock, gathered her up and told her they must buy winter clothes and in four days sail for Russia, where revolution was imminent. This trip to Russia was a turning point in their lives, both in terms of their political consciousness and their careers as journalists. With Reed carrying credentials from the socialist New York Call and the cultural monthly Seven Arts, and Bryant from the Metropolitan, Seven Arts, and Every Week, they were present for the most stirring events of the time: they interviewed Kerensky, leader of the provisional government; they heard of Lenin's disguised re-entry into the country in October. And they saw and reported the events leading up to the Revolution: the Bolsheviks' walkout from the pre-Parliament preparing for the Constituent Assembly, and Lenin's insistence that the Bolshevik Central Committee place armed insurrection on the agenda. The appointment by the Bolsheviks of a Military Revolutionary Committee to protect the garrison, after rumors that Kerensky meant to move the capital to Moscow in order to cede Petrograd to the Germans. The actual Revolution took place, by all accounts, surprisingly easily, triggered by Kerensky shutting down the Bolshevik newspapers, a sure sign of counterrevolution. The Bolsheviks called out the troops and the Red Guard, which held Petrograd by nightfall on November 6. The next morning, after shuttling back and forth all night between the Winter Palace (home to the provisional government) and the Smolny Institute (where the Bolsheviks were headquartered) Reed and Bryant emerged from their hotel to be handed leaflets proclaiming, "Citizens! The provisional government is deposed. State power has passed into the organ of the Petrograd Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies." When Reed asked a soldier on guard whether he was on the side of the government, he replied triumphantly, "No more Government! Slava Bogu! Glory to God!" A Second Congress of Soviets ratified the Bolshevik coup, and local soviets did the same, with little armed resistance except in Moscow. The Soviet government issued its new decrees, all confirmations of the profound changes that had taken place: Private property was abolished, and the land was given to the landless farmers who worked on it. The Bolsheviks announced that they would see peace with Germany without annexations or indemnities. Banks were nationalized, courts abolished in favor of revolutionary tribunals and workers' militias. Equality between the sexes was decreed. Jews and other previously subject peoples were granted equality, and ownership of the means of production was vested in the workers. These reforms, which would have been unimaginable and unachievable under the previous regime, seemed to be happening overnight. To onlookers like Louise and Jack, a classic revolution had succeeded: "backward" Russia had outstripped the United States as a progressive country, simply because the people had called for it. The change in daily life was fantastic, marvelous because it had seemed so unimaginable. The working class had awakened to its class role, just as Marx had predicted. Workers refused tips and people helped each other in the streets. Everyone was addressed as "comrade" (tovarisch) or "citizen," a revolutionary change in a country noted for its rigid class hierarchies. Amazing in themselves, these changes convinced onlookers like Bryant and Reed that Russia held lessons to be learned, and conveyed in turn to revolutionaries at home. The disorganized American left had been unable to reach the person on the street with its ideas - ideas that in Russia seemed to be transformed spontaneously into action. "The Bolsheviks took Petrograd and Jack and I were part of it all," Bryant later wrote proudly in an unpublished memoir. Reed's Ten Days that Shook the World and Bryant's Six Red Months in Russia are the offspring of their experience. They are two very different books. Though both writers shared an enthusiasm for the revolutionary cause, and though both were steeped in the nuances of events and personalities and had a highly developed sense of the politics that went on just before, during, and in the wake of the Revolution, they had widely differing agendas. Bryant had been charged by her news services to give "the woman's point of view," while Reed had no specific charge. Bryant was an equality feminist, believing that total equality between the sexes must be a key goal of any reform, radical, or revolutionary politics. She scorned such reforms as legislation that would protect women, seeing that such reforms would emphasize and re-inscribe differences between men and woman. So to her the charge given to write "from a woman's point of view" excluded absolutely nothing. Although her book includes portraits of the educator Aleksandra Kollontay and the revolutionary Marie Spirodnova that are insightful and meaningful models of intellectual reportage, Bryant was more interested in painting a picture of a society in which equality of the sexes had been mandated and was becoming a reality. Reed's account was meant for the history books. He collected documents of all kinds, republishing them in Ten Days; he recorded speeches and included them, sometimes without comment. The book, then, is an invaluable piece of reportage, a historical document that is almost totally accurate. But much of this material is undigested in any way; Reed did not see comment and interpretation as among his historical duties. To the contemporary reader the account seems laden down by details, an un-synthesized historical record. The work of a master journalist and historian, Ten Days was intended to be the first installment of a life work on Russian history. Reed's single-minded goal - to recreate that history - informs every page of the book. While striving for accuracy as assiduously as Reed, Bryant saw her mission in Six Red Days in Russia as something quite different. More the work of a talented journalist than Ten Days' historian, Bryant's Six Red Months is an attempt to observe, record, and interpret events, personalities, political issues, and daily life before and after the Revolution. If Reed's book gives the "big picture," history as made by great men, Bryant is more interested in looking at and describing Russian life as it was lived by the masses themselves. The author of Six Red Months is free with her opinions, and ever attuned to the need to communicate with her readers. The book is filled with phrases like "We must somehow make an honest attempt to understand what is happening in Russia" and "We have here in America an all too obvious and objectionable view of Russia. And this, you will agree, is based on fear." Such language puts her on the same footing as her readers, someone who will tell the truth and make sure she is understood. She never hesitates to broach an opinion: in describing Spirodonova's belief that women are more conscientious than men, and Angelica Balabanov's belief that women treasure freedom more than men do, Bryant objected in her narrative. "I wish I could believe it," she wrote, but I can never see spiritual difference between men and women inside or outside of politics. They act and react very much alike; they certainly did in the Russian revolution. It is one of the best arguments I know in favour of women's suffrage." The narrative of Six Red Months in Russia is engrossing and vivid. While few might admit it, many historians of this period seem to have relied more heavily on Bryant's account than on Ten Days. Her sweep was large: she described her journey into Russia, conditions in Petrograd, the tense atmosphere at the Winter Palace before its overthrow, the formation of the constituent assembly, the state of the military camps, free speech in the new regime, the decline of the church, and even her journey out of Russia by way of Sweden. Little escaped her eye. During the four months she spent in Russia (not six), Bryant came into her own as a journalist and a professional. She was aware of her great luck that she was working side by side with Reed; their presence together no doubt invested their respective narratives in inestimable ways. A poem she gave to Reed for Christmas, in the wake of the Revolution, conveys her love for him, her pride in what they had been through together, and the joy in working side by side, as reporters and as fellow revolutionaries: What I most want to tell you Is that I love you And I want more than anything To have you strong and clear-visioned In all this world madness? You are the finest person I know On both sides of the world And it is a nice privilege to be your comrade. The love story had an unhappy ending. Reed, on a 1920 trip to Baku in southern Russia, contracted typhus and died back in Moscow, Bryant at his side. She rebounded from his death to cover events in central Asia and published a second book, Mirrors of Moscow, in 1923. Becoming a first-rate foreign correspondent, she reported the first interview by a non-Italian with Mussolini, and another ground-breaking story with Turkish leader Enver Pasha. She married a third time, to the wealthy former diplomat William C. Bullitt, and in 1924 bore him her only child, Anne. After a bitter divorce, Bullitt took custody of Anne, and denied Bryant access to her daughter. Bryant lived on in Paris, stricken with Dercum's disease. It causes its sufferers so much pain that they frequently resort, as did Bryant, to drugs or alcohol. In her last days, she worked with a Harvard-trained biographer of Reed and his Communist Party friends, who were trying to make Reed into some kind of saint to further their ends. Bryant died in 1936 of a cerebral hemorrhage. To this day, Marxist cultural critics insist that Bryant has no proper place in history, or argue, as anarchist Emma Goldman famously did, "Louise was never a Communist; she only slept with a Communist." With her talent, energy, and phenomenal personality, Bryant was an explosion on the twentieth-century scene. A terrible irony is at work here - in spite of, perhaps even because of - her dramatic impact as a journalist and a progressive women, her presence has nearly been expunged from the rolls. A rekindled appreciation of her life, both with John Reed, and as a creative and capable journalist, feminist, and free spirit, is overdue. Recovering her story and reviving books like Six Red Months in Russia and Mirrors of Moscow is to realize how gender politics has influenced the making of history. The life Bryant made for herself - the choices she made, the risks she took, the battles she sought to take up, and those she declined to enter - show us that women do and should enter history not only for their achievements but also through the way they choose to shape their own lives. Recovering Louise Bryant's work and her life is not only an act of feminist and humanist recovery. It discovers a real twentieth-century heroine whose journalism has been unavailable far too long. Books by Louise Bryant: Six Red Months in Russia. William Heinemann, London, 1919 Mirrors of Moscow. Thomas Seltzer, New York, 1923 Books on Louise Bryant Friend and Lover: The Life of Louise Bryant. Horizon Press, New York, 1982 So Short a Time: A Biography of John Reed and Louise Bryant. Berkeley Books, New York, 1981 Queen of Bohemia: The Life of Louise Bryant. Houghton Mifflin Company, New York, 1996 | Mohan\Bryant, Anna Louisa "Louise" (I18484)
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56254 | Wilber Anderson in the U.S., Social Security Death Index, 1935-2014 Name: Wilber Anderson SSN: 309-38-2890 Last Residence: 47921 Boswell, Benton, Indiana, USA BORN: 1 Mar 1889 Last Benefit: 47993, Williamsport, Warren, Indiana, United States of America Died: Oct 1978 State (Year) SSN issued: Indiana (1954-1955) BURIAL Boswell Cemetery Boswell, Benton County, Indiana, USA | Anderson, Wilbur John (I31613)
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56255 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Sprouls, Wilber C. (I40910)
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56256 | Wilbert J Wilsey in the Missouri, Marriage Records, 1805-2002 Name: Wilbert J Wilsey Marriage Date: 3 Jul 1915 Marriage Place: Kahoka, Missouri Registration Place: Clark, Missouri, USA Spouse: Frances Marie Conlee Father: A R Wilsey | Family: Wilbert Jay "Buffalo Bill Jr" Wilsey / Frances Marie Conlee (F10615)
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56257 | Wilbert J Wilsey in the U.S., World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918 Name: Wilbert J Wilsey County: Laramie State: Wyoming Birthplace: Missouri Birth Date: 6 Feb 1896 Race: Caucasian (White) | Wilsey, Wilbert Jay "Buffalo Bill Jr" (I29674)
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56258 | Wilbert Jay "Buffalo Bill Jr" Wilsey BIRTH 6 Feb 1896 Saint Francisville, Clark County, Missouri, USA DEATH 25 Oct 1961 (aged 65) Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, California, USA BURIAL Mountain View Cemetery and Mausoleum Altadena, Los Angeles County, California, USA | Wilsey, Wilbert Jay "Buffalo Bill Jr" (I29674)
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56259 | Wilbert Peter Weiss BIRTH 23 May 1923 Wisconsin, USA DEATH 23 Sep 1997 (aged 74) Washington County, Wisconsin, USA BURIAL Saint Kilian Cemetery New Hartford, Washington County, Wisconsin, USA PLOT Section: E Block: 5 Lot: 13 Grave: 1 | Weiss, Wilbert Peter (I15670)
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56260 | Wilbur is living near his father and was the next household after his father to be visited by the census taker in the 1880 Census. 1880 United States Federal Census Name: Malves Drollingner Age: 24 Birth Date: Abt 1856 Birthplace: Indiana Home in 1880: Mill Creek, Fountain, Indiana, USA Dwelling Number: 97 Race: White Gender: Male Relation to Head of House: Self (Head) Marital status: Married Spouse's Name: Ollie Drollingner Father's Birthplace: Indiana Mother's Birthplace: Indiana Occupation: Farmer Neighbors: View others on page Household Members: Name Age Malves Drollingner 24 Ollie Drollingner 18 U.S., Social Security Applications and Claims Index Name: Winfield Raymond Drollinger Gender: Male Race: White Birth Date: 2 Oct 1882 Birth Place: Fountain Co, Indiana Father: Wilbur Drollinger Mother: Ollie Burke SSN: 261145856 Notes: Aug 1937: Name listed as WINFIELD RAYMOND DROLLINGER | Drollinger, Wilbur Monroe (I3164)
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56261 | Wilbur J Anderson in the Indiana, Marriage Certificates, 1917-2005 Name: Wilbur J Anderson Gender: Male Age: 74 Birth Date: abt 1889 Birth Place: Indiana Marriage Date: 1 Jul 1963 Marriage Place: Attica, Fountain, Indiana, USA Spouse: Waneta Frazier Certificate Number: 63-070388 | Family: Wilbur John Anderson / Waneta Kolaiser (F11478)
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56262 | Wilbur John Anderson in the U.S., World War II Draft Registration Cards, 1942 Name: Wilbur John Anderson Gender: Male Race: White Residence Age: 53 Birth Date: 1 Mar 1889 Birth Place: Benton, Indiana, USA Residence Date: 1942 Residence Place: Benton, Indiana, USA | Anderson, Wilbur John (I31613)
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56263 | Wilbur R Pierson in the 1930 United States Federal Census Name: Wilbur R Pierson Birth Year: abt 1916 Gender: Male Race: White Birthplace: Vermont Marital Status: Single Relation to Head of House: Nephew Home in 1930: Hinsdale, Cheshire, New Hampshire, USA Map of Home: View Map Street address: North Part Rr House Number: 33 Dwelling Number: 74 Family Number: 79 Attended School: Yes Able to Read and Write: Yes Father's Birthplace: Vermont Mother's Birthplace: Vermont Able to Speak English: Yes Household Members: Name Age Cecil H Morse 43 Ida M Morse 50 Harold F Morse 18 Susie E Pierson 18 Wilbur R Pierson 14 | Pierson, Wilbur Russell (I38780)
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56264 | Wilbur R Pierson in the Indiana, Death Certificates, 1899-2011 Name: Wilbur R Pierson Gender: Male Race: White Age: 71 Marital Status: Married Birth Date: 24 Mar 1915 Birth Place: Vermont Death Date: 13 May 1986 Death Place: Indianapolis, Marion, Indiana, USA Father: Platt Henry Pierson Mother: Delia Pierson Spouse: Rose Pierson Wilbur Pierson in the U.S., Social Security Death Index, 1935-2014 Name: Wilbur Pierson SSN: 008-10-4021 Last Residence: 46227 Indianapolis, Marion, Indiana, USA BORN: 24 Mar 1915 Last Benefit: 46227, Indianapolis, Marion, Indiana, United States of America Died: May 1986 State (Year) SSN issued: Vermont (Before 1951) | Pierson, Wilbur Russell (I38780)
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56265 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Sprouls, Wilber C. (I40910)
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56266 | Wildlife sculptor and avid bow hunter according to Argol Drollinger. Agrol said he has sold sculptures all around the world! (David H. Drollinger 24 July 2005) DANIEL PARKER (his photo is posted to his web site) Raised in northwestern Montana, Daniel is a self-taught artist. His studio?.the wilderness and the National Parks that surround him. Daniel has spent his life in the woods and mountains studying each animal in it?s natural habitat. This fast rising artist possesses a rare eye for the aesthetics of fine art and for capturing the unique balance and grace that each of his subjects command. Each piece is sculpted with the strictest attention to detail, posture and body proportions. Daniel?s sculptures are in prized collections around the world. Japan, Indonesia, Columbia, Mexico, Australia, Canada, and in countless collections around the United States. Collectors include Jack Nicklaus, who purchased the bear table ?Member?s Only?, which is now sold out. In July of l997 a piece dubbed, ?Montana?s Largest Bronze Sculpture?, was placed in front of the Hibernation Station at West Yellowstone?s Grizzly Park. This monument is a 11/2 life-size set of fighting bull elk entitled ?Yellowstone Legacy?. An awesome work that measures 23 feet long and 8 feet high. The entire piece was sculpted and constructed in his own foundry at Kalispell, Montana. In 1997 Daniel received the Ralph ?Tuffy? Berg Award at the Charles M. Russell Art Show in Great Falls, Montana. This prestigious award goes to the best new artist of the year. In 1998 his grizzly bear table entitled ?Brook?s Falls? was awarded the coveted, Best Sculpture-People?s Choice Award, again at the Charles M. Russell Art Show in Great Falls, Montana. In 1998 The ? Watcher Table? received the People?s Choice Award at Bennington Center for the Arts at Bennington, Vermont.. In 1998 Daniel received Best Sculpture Award at the Wild Wings Art Show at Lake City, Minnesota for his piece entitled ?Southfork Crossing?.. In February 1999 the National Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation Chose Daniel as their Sculpture Artist of the Year. Daniel is an avid supporter and contributor to RMEF. In March of 1999 Daniel?s work was again chosen for the ?Best Sculpture-People?s Choice?Award at the Charles M. Russell Art Show. In 1999 The artists themselves awarded Daniel The Artists Award for his elephant table entitled ?Sweet Talk?, at Bennington Center for the Arts, Bennington, Vermont. In April of 2000 Daniel won the coveted ?Viewers Favorite? award at the 2000 Spirit Of The Great Plains show at the Museum of Nebraska Art. Welcome / Monuments / Desktop Editions / Busts / North American Collection / New North American Collection / New Additions / Coming Soon / The Artist / Copyright Statement Parker Bronze, Inc., P.O. Box 5154, Kalispell, Montana 59903 (406) 257-3811, Fax: (406) 257-3812, TollFree: 1-877-257-3811 Contact Parker Bronze Contact the Webmaster Copyright © 1999-2004 Parker Bronze http://66.102.7.104/search?q=cache:TmdUb0enUKcJ:www.wildhorsegallery.com/artists.php%3FartistID%3D41+%22daniel+parker%22+kalispell+sculpture&hl=en Wildhorse Gallery Artist Profile Daniel Parker Winter On The Firehole (table) OriginalsRaised in northwestern Montana, Daniel is a self-taught artist. His studio is the wilderness and the National Parks that surround him. He has spent his life in the woods and mountains studying each animal in its natural habitat. This fast rising artist possesses a rare eye for the aesthetics of fine art and for capturing the unique balance and grace that each of his subjects command. Each piece is sculpted with the strictest attention to detail, posture and body proportions. In July of 1997 a piece dubbed ?Montana?s Largest Bronze Sculpture? was placed in front of the Hibernation Station at West Yellowstone?s Grizzly Park. This monument is a 1 ?1/2 life-sized set of fighting bull elk entitled ?Yellowstone Legacy?. The entire piece was sculpted and constructed in his own foundry at Kalispell, Montana. Awards and recognitions include: The Ralph ?Tuffy? Berg Award at the Charles M. Russell Art Show in Great Falls, Montana, 1997. This prestigious award goes to the best new artist of the year. The next year, his sculpture ?Brook?s Falls? was awarded the Best Sculpture-People?s Choice Award. In 1998, in Minnesota, Parker received Best Sculpture Award for ?Southfork Crossing? at the Wild Wings Art Show. In March 1999 his work was again chosen for the People?s Choice Award at the Russell Show in Montana. Daniel Parker is an avid supporter and contributor to the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation. In 1999 the NRMEF chose Daniel as their Sculpture Artist of the Year. In April of 2000 Daniel Parker won the coveted Viewers Favorite award at the 200 Spirit of the Great Plans show at the Museum of Nebraska Art. Daniel Parker?s sculptures are in prized collections around the world. | Parker, Daniel Ray (I14502)
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56267 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Trollinger, Jeffrey Bruce "Jeff" (I20956)
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56268 | Wilford Franklin Trullender is probably named in honor of his father's two brothers, Wilford and Frank, who both died as babies. 1870 United States Federal Census Name: Frak Trullender [Frank Trullender] Age in 1870: 3/12 Birth Year: abt 1869 Birthplace: Indiana Dwelling Number: 188 Home in 1870: Lancaster, Wells, Indiana Race: White Gender: Male Inferred Father: Ruben Trullender Inferred Mother: Mary E Trullender Household Members: Name Age Frak Trullender 3/12 Ruben Trullender 30 Mary E Trullender 24 Rena J Trullender 7 Rosella Trullender 5 | Trullender, Franklin "Frank" (I36491)
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56269 | Wilhelm Bauschlicher in the Baden, Germany, Lutheran Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1502-1985 Name: Wilhelm Bauschlicher Event Type: Taufe (Baptism) Birth Date: 22 Sep 1910 Baptism Date: 9 Okt 1910 (9 Oct 1910) Baptism Place: Ellmendingen, Baden (Baden-W | Bauschlicher, Wilhelm Scheimer (I25473)
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56270 | Wilhelm Christian Glauner in the Germany, Select Marriages, 1558-1929 Name: Wilhelm Christian Glauner Gender: Male Age: 25 Birth Date: 25 Mrz 1849 (25 Mar 1849) Birth Place: Graefenhausen Marriage Date: 2 Feb 1875 Marriage Place: Evangelisch, Graefenhausen, Schwarzwaldkreis,Wuerttemberg Father: Georg Friedrich Glauner Mother: Rosina Barbara Gremmer Spouse: Karolina Maier FHL Film Number: 1340120 | Glauner, Wilhelm Christian (I38526)
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56271 | Wilhelm Drollinger in the New York, Passenger Lists, 1820-1957 Name: Wilhelm Drollinger Arrival Date: 29 Oct 1891 Birth Date: abt 1891 Age: 6/12 Gender: Male Ethnicity/ Nationality: German Place of Origin: Germany Port of Departure: Bremen, Germany and Southampton, England Destination: New York Port of Arrival: New York, New York Ship Name: Havel Search Ship Database:Search for the Havel in the 'Passenger Ships and Images' database | Drollinger, Christoph Wilhelm (I40404)
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56272 | Wilhelm Drollinger Deutschland Geburten und Taufen Name Wilhelm Drollinger Event Date 1846 Gender Male Birth Date 25 Apr 1846 Birth Year 1846 Birthplace Ellmendingen, Baden, Germany Christening Date 26 Apr 1846 Christening Place Ellmendingen, Baden, Germany Father's Name Wilhelm Drollinger Mother's Name Barbara Rothfelder | Drollinger, Wilhelm (I1519)
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56273 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Mueller, Wilhelm Ernst (I40786)
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56274 | Wilhelm Friedrich Kiess in the Germany, Select Births and Baptisms, 1558-1898 Name: Wilhelm Friedrich Kiess Gender: Male Birth Date: 13 Mai 1866 (13 May 1866) Birth Place: Dietenhaussen Baptism Date: 20 Mai 1866 (20 May 1866) Baptism Place: Evangelisch, Ellmendingen, Karlsruhe, Baden Death Date: 10 Okt 1866 (10 Oct 1866) Father: Christian Kiess Mother: Anna Maria Drollinger FHL Film Number: 1238350 Reference ID: 2:RNCBLR | Kiess, Wilhelm Friedrich (I10841)
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56275 | Wilhelm Friedrich Mueller Deutschland Geburten und Taufen Other information in the record of Wilhelm Friedrich Mueller from Deutschland Geburten und Taufen Name Wilhelm Friedrich Mueller Event Date 1705 - 1906 Event Date 1888 Gender Male Birth Date 11 Dec 1888 Birth Year 1888 Birthplace Ottenhausen Christening Date 18 Dec 1888 Christening Place EVANGELISCH, OTTENHAUSEN, SCHWARZWALDKREIS, WUERTTEMBERG Death Date 19 Dec 1888 Father's Name Gottlob Samuel Mueller Mother's Name Wilhelmine Drollinger Deutschland Geburten und Taufen, 1558-1898 Reference ID 2:2DG2TZW System Origin Germany-VR GS Film Number 1056855 Indexing Project (Batch) Number https://familysearch.org/search/record/results?count=20&query=+batch_number:C93233-1 | Mueller, Wilhelm Friedrich (I19016)
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56276 | Wilhelm Gottlieb Drollinger 29 Dec 1890 Salmbach, Baden 23 Sep 1914 probably France Verlustlisten 1. Weltkrieg, page 2750: Drollinger Wilhelm (Ellmendingen, Pforzheim) http://des.genealogy.net/search/show/782176 Deutschland, Verlustlisten im 1. Weltkrieg, 1914-1917 Germany, World War I Casualty Lists, 1914-1917 about Wilhelm Drollinger Name: Wilhelm Drollinger List Number: 0039 List Date: 23 Sep 1914 Infantry Regiment 114 Deutschland, Verlustlisten im 1. Weltkrieg, 1914-1917 Germany, World War I Casualty Lists, 1914-1917 about Wilhelm Drollinger Name: Wilhelm Drollinger List Number: 0050 List Date: 26 Sep 1914 Deutschland, Verlustlisten im 1. Weltkrieg, 1914-1917 Germany, World War I Casualty Lists, 1914-1917 about Wilhelm Drollinger Name: Wilhelm Drollinger List Number: 0209 List Date: 20 Nov 1914 heavy wound Deutschland, Verlustlisten im 1. Weltkrieg, 1914-1917 Germany, World War I Casualty Lists, 1914-1917 about Wilhelm Drollinger Name: Wilhelm Drollinger List Number: 0687 List Date: 15 Sep 1915 missing Deutschland, Verlustlisten im 1. Weltkrieg, 1914-1917 Germany, World War I Casualty Lists, 1914-1917 about Wilhelm Drollinger Name: Wilhelm Drollinger List Number: 0904 List Date: 11 Mrz 1916 (11 Mar 1916) # 3 Company 126 Regiment remains missing Deutschland, Verlustlisten im 1. Weltkrieg, 1914-1917 Germany, World War I Casualty Lists, 1914-1917 about Wilhelm Drollinger Name: Wilhelm Drollinger List Number: 1330 List Date: 5 Jan 1917 remains missing | Weik, Wilhelm Gottlieb (I21205)
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56277 | Wilhelm Heinkel in the Baden, Germany, Lutheran Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1502-1985 Name: Wilhelm Heinkel Death Age: 55 Event Type: Beerdigung (Burial) Birth Date: 8 Mai 1857 (8 May 1857) Death Date: 19 Jul 1912 Burial Date: 21 Jul 1912 Burial Place: Ellmendingen, Baden (Baden-Württemberg), Preu�en (Germany) Parish as it Appears: Ellmendingen Page Number: 362;363 | Family: Theodor Wilhelm Heinkel / Anna Maria Drollinger (F14464)
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56278 | Wilhelm Heinkel in the Germany, Select Births and Baptisms, 1558-1898 Name: Wilhelm Heinkel Gender: Male Birth Date: 8 Mai 1857 (8 May 1857) Birth Place: Ellmendingen, Baden, Germany Baptism Date: 17 Mai 1857 (17 May 1857) Baptism Place: Ellmendingen, Baden, Germany Death Date: 19 Jul 1912 Father: Martin Heinkel Mother: Magdalena Roth FHL Film Number: 1238338 | Heinkel (Henkel), Wilhelm (I38420)
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56279 | Wilhelm Hermann Buchler Germany, Lutheran Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1500-1971 Name: Wilhelm Hermann Buchler Event Type: Marriage Event Date: 5 Jun 1916 Event Place:Ittersbach, Pforzheim, Baden, Deutschland Event Place (Original): Ittersbach, Ittersbach,Baden, Preußen Sex: Male Birth Date: 18 Feb 1892 Father's Name: Friedrich Buchler Mother's Name: Amalie Gottliebie Spouse's Name: Justine Ahr Spouse's Sex: Female Spouse's Birth Date: 22 Oct 1894 Spouse's Father's Name: Jakob Ahr Spouse's Mother's Name: Justine Christine Page Number: 102;103 Mother's Alias: Landenberger Spouse's Mother's Alias: Rau | Buchler, Wilhelm Hermann (I5738)
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56280 | Wilhelm Hoelle in the Germany, Select Births and Baptisms, 1558-1898 Name: Wilhelm Hoelle Gender: Male Baptism Age: 0 Death Age: 44 Birth Date: 22. Jan 1850 (22 Jan 1850) Baptism Date: 31. Jan 1850 (31 Jan 1850) Baptism Place: Eutingen, Baden, Germany Residence Place: Eutingen, Baden, Germany Death Date: 30. Jul 1894 (30 Jul 1894) Father: Jacob Friedrich Hoelle Mother: Catharina Karst FHL Film Number: 1238345 | Hoelle, Wilhelm (I26131)
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56281 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: Wilhelm Holl / Emilie Schlittenhardt (F15673)
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56282 | Wilhelm Jakob Drollinger in the Baden, Germany, Lutheran Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1502-1985 Name: Wilhelm Jakob Drollinger Death Age: 9/12 Event Type: Beerdigung (Burial) Birth Date: abt 1848 Death Date: 10 Mai 1849 (10 May 1849) Burial Date: 12 Mai 1849 (12 May 1849) Burial Place: Neureut-S, Baden (Baden-Württemberg), Deutschland (Germany) Father: Wilhelm Drollinger Mother: Margaretha Drollinger Author: Evangelische Kirche Welschneureuth (A. Karlsruhe) City or District: Welschneureuth Parish as it Appears: Welsch Neureuth Page Number: 70;71 | Drollinger, Wilhelm Jakob (I544)
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56283 | Wilhelm Jakob Drollinger in the Baden, Germany, Lutheran Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1502-1985 Name: Wilhelm Jakob Drollinger Gender: männlich (Male) Event Type: Taufe (Baptism) Birth Date: 20 Jul 1848 Baptism Date: 30 Jul 1848 Baptism Place: Welschneureuth, Baden (Baden-Württemberg), Deutschland (Germany) Father: Wilhelm Drollinger Mother: Margaretha Drollinger Legitimacy: Ehelich Author: Evangelische Kirche Welschneureuth (A. Karlsruhe) City or District: Welschneureuth Parish as it Appears: Welsch Nemeuth Page Number: 108;109 | Drollinger, Wilhelm Jakob (I544)
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56284 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Kugele, Wilhelm Karl (I40381)
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56285 | Wilhelm Kern in the Germany, Select Births and Baptisms, 1558-1898 Name: Wilhelm Kern Gender: Male Birth Date: 18 Nov 1840 Baptism Date: 21 Nov 1840 Baptism Place: Nöttingen, Baden, Germany Father: Karl Kern Mother: Margaretha Drollinger FHL Film Number: 1238324 Reference ID: pg98cn40 | Kern, Wilhelm (I29935)
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56286 | Wilhelm Kern in the Germany, Select Marriages, 1558-1929 Name: Wilhelm Kern Gender: Male Age: 37 Birth Date: 1841 Marriage Date: 10 Feb 1878 Marriage Place: Nöttingen, Baden, Germany Father: Karl Kern Mother: Magdalena Drollinger Spouse: Wilhelmine Schaefer FHL Film Number: 1238322 | Family: Wilhelm Kern / Wilhelmine Schaefer (F14485)
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56287 | Wilhelm Knoeller Deutschland Geburten und Taufen Other information in the record of Wilhelm Knoeller from Deutschland Geburten und Taufen Name Wilhelm Knoeller Event Date 1839 Gender Male Birth Date 07 Oct 1839 Birth Year 1839 Christening Date 13 Oct 1839 Christening Place Eutingen, Baden, Germany Death Date 03 Sep 1840 Father's Name Jacob Knoeller Mother's Name Juliana Drollinger Deutschland Geburten und Taufen, 1558-1898 System Origin Germany-EASy GS Film Number 1238345 Indexing Project (Batch) Number C93747-2 Citing this Record "Deutschland Geburten und Taufen, 1558-1898," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NCD3-B26 : 28 November 2014), Wilhelm Knoeller, 13 Oct 1839; citing ; FHL microfilm 1,238,345. | Knoeller, Wilhelm (I26200)
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56288 | Wilhelm Ludwig Drollinger in the Baden, Germany, Lutheran Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1502-1985 Name: Wilhelm Ludwig Drollinger Event Type: Taufe (Baptism) Birth Date: 20 Okt 1877 (20 Oct 1877) Baptism Date: 4 Nov 1877 Baptism Place: Welschneureuth, Baden (Baden-Württemberg), Deutschland (Germany) Father: Wilhelm Drollinger Mother: Christina Katharina Drollinger Author: Evangelische Kirche Welschneureuth (A. Karlsruhe) City or District: Welschneureuth Parish as it Appears: Welsch Nemeuth Page Number: 102;103 | Drollinger, Wilhelm Ludwig (I570)
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56289 | Wilhelm Ludwig Drollinger in the Baden, Germany, Lutheran Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1502-1985 Name: Wilhelm Ludwig Drollinger Gender: männlich (Male) Marriage Age: 23 Event Type: Heirat (Marriage) Birth Date: abt 1877 Marriage Date: 17 Nov 1900 Marriage Place: Neureut-S, Baden (Baden-Württemberg), Deutschland (Germany) Father: Wilhelm Drollinger Mother: Christine Drollinger Spouse: Christine Pfulb Author: Evangelische Kirche Welschneureuth (A. Karlsruhe) City or District: Welschneureuth Parish as it Appears: Welschneureuth Page Number: 90 Christine Pfulb in the Baden, Germany, Lutheran Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1502-1985 Name: Christine Pfulb Gender: weiblich (Female) Marriage Age: 21 Event Type: Heirat (Marriage) Birth Date: abt 1879 Marriage Date: 17 Nov 1900 Marriage Place: Neureut-S, Baden (Baden-Württemberg), Deutschland (Germany) Father: Friedrich Pfulb Mother: Katharine Pfulb Spouse: Wilhelm Ludwig Drollinger Author: Evangelische Kirche Welschneureuth (A. Karlsruhe) City or District: Welschneureuth Parish as it Appears: Welschneureuth Page Number: 90 | Family: Wilhelm Ludwig Drollinger / Christine Katherina Pfulb (F193)
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56290 | Wilhelm Mayer in the Germany, Select Births and Baptisms, 1558-1898 Name: Wilhelm Mayer Gender: Male Birth Date: 2 Mrz 1856 (2 Mar 1856) Baptism Date: 6 Mrz 1856 (6 Mar 1856) Baptism Place: Evangelisch, Ellmendingen, Karlsruhe, Baden Death Date: 28 Mrz 1879 (28 Mar 1879) Father: Carl Friedrich Mayer Mother: Anna Maria Drollinger FHL Film Number: 1238339 Reference ID: 2:MPPFPN | Mayer, Wilhelm (I147)
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56291 | Wilhelm Munzinger in the Baden and Hesse Germany, Lutheran Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1502-1985 Name: Wilhelm Munzinger Gender: männlich (Male) Marriage Age: 29 Event Type: Heirat (Marriage) Birth Date: 15. Nov 1813 (15 Nov 1813) Marriage Date: 15. Dez 1842 (15 Dec 1842) Marriage Place: Weiler, Baden (Baden-Württemberg), Preußen Father: Wilhelm Munzinger Mother: Catharina Munzinger Spouse: Elisabetha Zechiel Parish as it Appears: Weiler Page number: 167 | Family: Wilhelm Munzinger / Elizabeth Zechiel (F5910)
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56292 | Wilhelm Otto Drollinger is a son of Samuel Drollinger and Emma Sauer. Your file shows a daughter, Ida Drollinger who is married to Ludwig Kuhn. The source I am sending shows he is married to Frieda Lust. Virginia Drollinger Ewell, a cousin, shows in her records that Wilhelm Otto Drollinger died 3 April 1973. Her file shows that Frieda Lust died 13 November 1983. They were married 13 December 1916 and place is on the record. Place is too long to print. Grant Drollinger email 1 1 2015 | Drollinger, Wilhelm Otto (I36668)
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56293 | Wilhelm Ruf in the Karlsruhe, Germany, Deaths, 1870-1951 Name: Wilhelm Ruf Age: 25 Birth Date: abt 1901 Death Date: 25 Jul 1926 Death Place: Karlsruhe, Baden-W | Ruf, Wilhelm (I18987)
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56294 | Wilhelm Ullmann in the Hesse, Germany, Deaths, 1851-1958 Name: Wilhelm Ullmann Gender: männlich (Male) Age: 18 Birth Date: abt 1890 Death Date: 5 Sep 1908 Death Place: Marburg, Hessen (Hesse), Deutschland (Germany) Civil Registration Office: Marburg Father: Christian Ullmann Mother: Margarete Ullmann Certificate Number: 350 | Ullmann, Wilhelm (I11973)
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56295 | Wilhelm was an electrician on the battleship Tirpitz during the second world war GLD | Drollinger, Wilhelm August (I474)
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56296 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Goeckler, Wilhelmina (I44379)
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56297 | Wilhelmina Kiefer in the Mannheim, Germany, Death Records, 1870-1950 Name: Wilhelmina Kiefer [Wilhelmina Schneider] Birth Date: abt 1863 Age: 49 Death Date: 5 Jun 1912 Death Place: Kaefertal, Mannheim, Germany Certificate Number: 78 | Kiess, Wilhelmina (Wilhelmine) (I10839)
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56298 | Wilhelmina Nell BIRTH 24 AUG 1832 • St. Michael's Evangelical Lutheran Church,Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US DEATH 11 JAN 1898 • Harrisburg, Dauphin, Pennsylvania, US | Nell, Wilhelmina (I38332)
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56299 | Wilhelmina Nell BIRTH 24 AUG 1832 • St. Michael's Evangelical Lutheran Church,Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US DEATH 11 JAN 1898 • Harrisburg, Dauphin, Pennsylvania, US | Nell, Wilhelmina (I38332)
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56300 | Wilhelmine Dennig in the Germany, Select Births and Baptisms, 1558-1898 Name: Wilhelmine Dennig Gender: Female Birth Date: 13 Apr 1859 Birth Place: Dietenhaussen Baptism Date: 17 Apr 1859 Baptism Place: Ellmendingen, Karlsruhe, Baden Death Date: 18 Jun 1905 Father: Jakob Friedrich Dennig Mother: Wilhelmine Dennig FHL Film Number: 1238350 | Dennig, Wilhelmine (I494)
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