Perrin Family Tree

Source Page 1

  • [S1] Ancestry.com, U.S. Public Records Index, Volume 2 (Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.)
  • [S2] Hunting For Bears, comp., Missouri Marriages, 1766-1983 (Ancestry.com Operations Inc)
  • [S3] Ancestry.com., Kansas State Census Collection, 1855-1925 (Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2009.Original data - 1855 Kansas Territory Census. Microfilm reel K-1. Kansas State Historical Society.1856, 1857, and 1858 Kansas Territory Censuses. Microfilm reel K-1. Kansas State Histo)
  • [S4] Ancestry.com, Missouri Marriage Records, 1805-2002 (Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.)
  • [S5] Ancestry.com, 1850 United States Federal Census (Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.)
  • [S6] National Cemetery Administration, U.S. Veterans Gravesites, ca.1775-2006 (Ancestry.com Operations Inc)
  • [S7] Ancestry.com, 1930 United States Federal Census (Ancestry.com Operations Inc)
  • [S8] Ancestry.com, U.S. Cemetery and Funeral Home Collection (Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2011.Original data - See source information provided with each entry.Original data: See source information provided with each entry.)
  • [S9] Ancestry.com, U.S. City Directories, 1821-1989 (Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.)
  • [S10] Ancestry.com, Social Security Death Index (Ancestry.com Operations Inc)
  • [S11] Ancestry.com, Web: Missouri, Find A Grave Index, 1812-2012 (Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.)
  • [S12] Ancestry.com, United States Obituary Collection (Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2006.Original data - See newspaper information provided with each entry.Original data: See newspaper information provided with each entry.)
  • [S13] Ancestry Family Trees (Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.)
  • [S14] Ancestry.com, 1860 United States Federal Census (Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.)
  • [S15] Edmund West, comp., Family Data Collection - Individual Records (Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2000.)
  • [S16] Ancestry.com, 1940 United States Federal Census (Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.)
  • [S17] Ancestry.com, 1920 United States Federal Census (Ancestry.com Operations Inc)
  • [S18] Ancestry.com, Web: Obituary Daily Times Index, 1995-2012 (Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.)
  • [S19] Ancestry.com, Web: Jackson County, Missouri, Marriage Index, 2002-2010 (Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.)
  • [S20] Ancestry.com, 1900 United States Federal Census (Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004.Original data - United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Twelfth Census of the United States, 1900. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1900. T623, 1)
  • [S21] Ancestry.com, U.S., World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918 (Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2005.Original data - United States, Selective Service System. World War I Selective Service System Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Admin)
  • [S22]
    Joan's will left "unto my three daughters Elizabeth, Anna, Mary 100lbs a peece at their ages of 21 years..." Joan's will further states "I do herebie appoint my daughter Elizabeth Hollie to take all my right power and authority, during the said minority to collect yearly rent.... To my daughter Elizabeth 80lbs as wee as her procion from her father.... Elizabeth to have charge of the education of my unmarried children...."
  • [S23]
    (The will of Joshua Dorsey was marked with the D'Arcy cinquefoil.)
  • [S24]
    (As an INFANT.)
  • [S28]
    (Swede Point is now known as "Madrid.")
  • [S29]
    He was killed by Uncle Will.
  • [S30]
    The tombstone reads "Norah C. Childs."
  • [S36]
    (May be 1730.)
  • [S37]
    He was Bretwalda, leader of the army. He, like his predecessor, Ella or Aelle of Sussex, "commanded at most a shadowy form of allegiance." Their influence did not extend north of the Humber River.
  • [S43]
    He was slain in battle.
  • [S45]
    He was assassinated.
  • [S48]
    Thomas Fitz Alan, son of Richard Earl of Surrey and Arundel, may be the same as Thomas Arunden, who had become Archbishop of Canterbury during the reign of Richard II, and who was exiled after Richard of Arundel was beheaded in 1397.
  • [S49]
    He fought with the Britons, and slew three other kings. This gave him control over Gloucester, Cirencester, and Bath.
  • [S52]
    She died of cancer.
  • [S56]
    (May be 1505.)
  • [S57]
    Services were conducted at the First Christian Church in the city of Buckner.
  • [S61]
    (It is known she died before her father.)
  • [S64]
    (May be 1739.)
  • [S65]
    (Twin of Alexander.)
  • [S66]
    (May be 1726.)
  • [S75]
    (16th year of the reign of King Henry VII.)
  • [S76]
    Twin brother of Edmund Heard.
  • [S77]
    He was the first agent at the FBI Academy that shot a perfect score on the .38 revolver test with both the left and right hands.
  • [S78]
    Or 1706.
  • [S80]
    (Beheaded on a charge of treason.)
  • [S84]
    He was beheaded.
  • [S94]
    Elizabeth de Bohun, wife of Sir Richard Fitz Alan, Earl of Surrey and Arundel died before her husband in 1385. They were both Plantagenet descendants.
  • [S97]
    She was baptized at the same time as her son William.
  • [S98]
    She was the twin sister of Winnie Bell HERRON.
  • [S102]
    (He died at the age of six.)
  • [S105]
    (The Royalty database has 1199.)
  • [S106]
    Ensign Constant Southworth, b. 1614 in Leyden, Holland, son of Edward Southworth and Alice Carpenter, was one of the young pilgrims who went to New England with his widowed mother in 1623. She had remarried - to Gov. William Bradford, governor of the Plymouth Colony, and Constant, and his brother Thomas, were brought up in the Bradford Household in Plymouth.
  • [S118]
    At the age of 17
  • [S119]
    (May be 1461.)
  • [S120]
    Robert Needham, b. 1535 in Shavington, Shropshire, son of Thomas Needham and Anne Talbot.
  • [S121]
    Among his works were Dryden's "Fables."
  • [S123]
    (She taught in Austin, Dallas, and Houston.)
  • [S128]
    (It is known she lived to the age of 82.)
  • [S130]
    (Sir Philip was executed, under what circumstances we do not know.)
  • [S132]
    (Or 1711.)
  • [S140]
    He died from cancer.
  • [S142]
    (He died in a logging accident.)
  • [S147]
    (Or 1292.)
  • [S148]
    King Loarn, King of Dal Riada in the 5th Century, son of Erc (Eric). His line was appanaged in Lorn, called after him. He was the father of Muiredach and Eirc and ancestor of St. Columba (d.597); King Macbeth; and Malcolm, King of Moray d. 1029.
  • [S151]
    Anne Talbot, b. 1515, dtr of Sir John Talbot of albrighton, Shropshire, and Grafton, Worcestershire, and Margaret Troutbeck of Mobberly, Chester.
  • [S152]
    He was supposed to be "Aytchmonde Layne Perrin, Jr.," but his birth certificate was made out as "H. L. Perrin, Jr." Later in life, he had his name changed to what it is now.
  • [S156]
    He was assassinated.
  • [S157]
    He was the first elected Bretwalda.
  • [S158]
    She was the twin sister of Minnie Lee HERRON.
  • [S160]
    Thomas Needham, of Shavington in Shropshire, b. 1510, son of Sir Robert Needham and Agnes Mainwairing.
  • [S161]
    This birth may hae been 20 August 1773.
  • [S162]
    Twin brother of Albert Heard.
  • [S174]
    Captain Thomas Southworth (b. 1616 in Leyden, Holland) youngest son of Edward Southworth and Alice Carpenter, lived in Holland from 1616 until 1623, when he migrated with his widowed mother and his older brother Constant to Plymouth Colony. Thomas Southworth was raised by his step-father Gov. William Bradford, of Plymouth Colony.
  • [S179]
    She was daughter of the 7th Earl of Galloway.
  • [S180]
    (Twin of Aytchman.)
  • [S181]
    She died of pneumonia.
  • [S182]
    He is the earliest known of the Mugmedon family.
  • [S185]
    It was performed by Bishop Birinus.
  • [S186]
    Grace Chetwode Bulkeley, 2nd wife of The Rev. Peter Bulkeley, died 21 April 1669 at New London Connecticut.
  • [S190]
    Her parents were not married at the time.
  • [S194]
    He was killed in battle.
  • [S197]
    (She was hit by lightning and died at a young age.)
  • [S198]
    She was beheaded.
  • [S200]
    He died from pulmonary edema resulting from severe coronary arteriosclerosis.
  • [S201]
    (The Clopton book, page 28, has this birth occurring in 1385. His parents married in 1344, and he was the second son. The Clopton book gives the day of birth as 1 August.)
  • [S203]
    Thomas Southworth (1548-1616) eldest son and heir of Sir John of Samlesbury Hall in Lancashire, became a Protestant by 1584, for which his father threatened to disinherit him, the father John being a moderate Catholic. The son, Thomas, living in London in 1584, had returned with his father to Samlesbury by 1594.
  • [S204]
    (Autopsy indicated that this child was fatally injured by birth trauma.)
  • [S213]
    She spent some of the time before her death in exile in France.
  • [S214]
    (At the age of five.)
  • [S215]
    The will was written in Latin.
  • [S221]
    His first name was pronounced "Tony" and not "Tone." Huntsucker family members report that his mother gave him his middle name "Last" because she didn't want to have any more kids.
  • [S224]
    She was taken ill with cholera and died.
  • [S228]
    (Charley Perrin Grimbley was mentioned as an "infant grandson" by William F. Perrin as part of a codocil to his will, dated 19 October 1903.)
  • [S231]
    She died during childbirth.
  • [S232]
    This death may have been in 1850.
  • [S233]
    (The document "Descendents of Thomas Dudley Glover" has the birth date of Georgia Evangeline Robinson as 20 October 1888.)
  • [S235]
    She died in an automobile accident.
  • [S237]
    He died as a small child.
  • [S239]
    He was assassinated by Macbeth, the great steward of Ross and Moray.
  • [S242]
    (The genealogy of George Washington has his death as being in 1264.)
  • [S243]
    (Killed during the War between the States, at the age of 12, during an attack by the Union Army.)
  • [S245]
    Elizabeth de Bohun, great-granddaughter of Edward I and Eleanor.
  • [S249]
    (From the "High Court of Admiralty Examinations", No. 301, Vol. 53, at London, England.)