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Matches 201 to 250 of 284 Thumbnails Only
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| 201 | Monroe Stewart and Hannah S. Butler and their children Back Row, Left to Right; Lulu Butler, Celesta Arcola (Cody), Edith Olive and Effie Coral. Seated, Monroe Stewart and Hannah Sara Butler. Front Row, Left to Right; Verna Grace, Baby Metta Joyce, Baby Chesney Harold (Harley) and Charles Bermie Monroe. Missing are the two unborn children, Murl Kenneth and Amber Dean. |
Family: Stewart/Butler (F0262)
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| 202 | Myrtle Flo and Mabel Florence McKinney |
Mabel Florence McKinney
Myrtle Flo McKinney | |
| 203 | Myrtle Flo McKinney Sligo, 1945. Flag in window is for son Richard Charles serving in the United States Navy. |
Myrtle Flo McKinney
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| 204 | Nelson Stewart |
Nelson Stewart
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| 205 | Nelson Stewart (left) and John Franklin Pierce Benn |
John Franklin Pierce Benn
Nelson Stewart | |
| 206 | Parade Members of the Grand Army of the Republic, Rimersburg, Clarion County, Pennsylvania, May 30, 1907 | ||
| 207 | Parker's Landing High School Band Parker's Landing, Clarion County, Pennsylvania | ||
| 208 | Passenger List LaChampagne arrived Port of New York May 20, 1890 from LeHavre, France Joseph Rhein. Louise Laeng Rhein is listed separately on another page on the ship's manifest. |
Louise Laeng
Joseph Rhein | |
| 209 | Photo 10 | ||
| 210 | Photo 7 | ||
| 211 | Photo 8 | ||
| 212 | Photo 9 | ||
| 213 | Polliard Reunion 1927 Back row, left to right; Ruth Polliard, Romaine Laughlin, Charles Laughlin, Maye Polliard, Eugene Polliard, Ethel Polliard, Robert Jr. (infant) Bob Polliard, Lloyd Phillips. Middle row,left to right; George Polliard, Lulu McDonald, Idella Stewart, Carm Polliard, Flo Polliard, Ben Phillips, Don Phillips. Front row, left to right; Charles Laughlin, Jane Polliard, Louise Laughlin, Ethel Maye Polliard, Jean Laughlin, Frank Phillips, Paul Phillips. |
Charles Allen Laughlin
Lulu Ethel McDonald H. Benjamin Phillips Carmen Terrah Polliard Ruth Irene Polliard Ruth Idella Stewart | |
| 214 | Polliard Service Station 1926 and 1966 Chryslers |
George Terrah Polliard
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| 215 | Residence of Thomas Stewart II |
Thomas Stewart, II
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| 216 | Richard Charles Cole 1925-2008 |
Richard Charles Cole
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| 217 | Rimersburg Area, Clarion County Cemeteries This is a list of Stewarts buried in Rimersburg area cemeteries compiled by Dawn McDonald Satterwhite. Twenty four pages and over 280 names in alphabetical order. For reference purposes it is indexed to William Sewart II (1779-1825) the progenitor of the Stewarts in Clarion County, Pennsylvania. See page 23 on the list. |
William Stewart, II
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| 218 | Rockville 1911 Basketball Team, Porter Township, Clarion County, Pennsylvania |
Fred Lester Laughlin
William Harold Laughlin | |
| 219 | Ross Polliard and Carmi Terrah Polliard |
Carmen Terrah Polliard
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| 220 | Roster of 148th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry in the Civil War. |
Jeremiah Zachariah Brown
William H. Divins Anthony McKinney Joseph Milligan William H. Milligan David F. Polliard | |
| 221 | Samuel F. Stewart |
Samuel F. Stewart
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| 222 | Sligo High School Class of 1918. Mabel Florence McKinney, seated first row, third from right. |
Mabel Florence McKinney
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| 223 | Sligo High School Sligo High School, Clarion County, Pennsylvania, Junior Class of 1925-1926. Standing left to right; Hazel Fox, Orpha Over, Maude Shook, Helen Sedgewick, Iona Cotzer, Dee Best, Sam Wagner, Janice Craig,John Fetzer, , Jane Mahle, Drew Logue, Kelly Callen, Buzzy Buchs,and Floyd L. "Rabbit" McKinney. Sitting left to right; Mabelle Curll, Charles Shook, Merle Corbet, Bob Muir, ? Shaw, Iantha Wagner, Phyl Stewart. (Angela Gay Kinkead sent the photo to Helen McElravy who forwarded it to Joe Rhein. "While I was in Pittsburgh this weekend, I looked up a Postcard Club Show in Whitehall. Found the attached postcard in the "Sligo" section. Couldn't pass it up. Sligo Junior Class of 1925-26 and Rabbit McKinney. I'm sure you'll recognize names and maybe the faces.") |
Floyd L. McKinney
Robert Morris McKinney | |
| 224 | Sligo High School - 1924 Floyd L. McKinney is 5th from the left in the first row. |
Floyd L. McKinney
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| 225 | Sligo Train Crew Left to Right: Davey Williams, Engineer; Pete Colwell, Conductor; Pete Everhart, Fireman; Frank Burns, Brakeman; James Berreau, Brakeman; John Henry McKinney, Flagman (dayime), Conductor (night). |
John Henry McKinney
Gilmer Williams | |
| 226 | Sligo Train Wreck Occurred on the Sligo branch, January 3, 1919, near the Sterling Mines - 19 cars were involved. Callen, the Engineer, was killed. Love, a Fireman, Miller and Shoemaker were injured. |
William Ellsmore Callen
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| 227 | Sligo, Clarion County, Pennsylvania Repairing the road |
Colonel Joseph J. McKinney
John Delbert McKinney John Henry McKinney George Burt Shields | |
| 228 | Sligo, Clarion County, Pennsylvania (circa 1908) |
John Henry McKinney
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| 229 | Social Security Application Floyd L. McKinney (1909 - 1974) |
Floyd L. McKinney
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| 230 | Squirrel Hill Cemetery, Porter Township, Clarion County, Pennsylvania A mixture of Polliards and McDonalds. No one is clearly in rows. Back row, left to right; Lloyd Phillips, Henry Benn Phillips, Paul Phillips, Frank Polliard (behind this group), Don Phillips, Bud McKrell, young man, George Polliard, Ralph McDonald,?,? and ?. Front row, left to right; Flo Phillips, Robert Polliard, Sr., Ethel Polliard, Mary Lou Polliard (little girl), Dorothy Phillips, ?, Earl and Elsie McDonald, Lulu Polliard, Geraldine McKrell, Byron McDonald, Maude McDonald, ?,?, Jane Polliard. Frank Polliard is behind the back row. |
George Byron McDonald
Lulu Ethel McDonald H. Benjamin Phillips Elsie Flo Polliard Jane Idella Polliard William Frank Polliard | |
| 231 | Stewart Brothers From left to right; Don, Galen and William Arthur Stewart, sons of Brady Sheldon Stewart and Kitty Reichard. |
Don Stewart
Galen Stewart William Arthur Stewart | |
| 232 | Stewart Brothers Some Years Later From left to right; William Arthur, Don and Galen. |
Don Stewart
Galen Stewart William Arthur Stewart | |
| 233 | Stewart Family Gathering Ellen L. Orr is the elderly woman at the back center of the photo. |
Ellen L. Orr
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| 234 | Sunday Afternoon in Clarion County, Pennsylvania Frederick Roy McKinney is 5th from the left. I believe that the young woman sixth from the left is Kathern Mildred Beer and seventh from the left is her brother John Wilber Beer. Second from the left is Kathern's other brother Harry Rhande Beer. There is a fair degree of probability that the first woman on the left is Grace Gertrude Latshaw. |
Harry Rhande. Beer
John Wilber Beer Kathern Mildred Beer Grace Gertrude Latshaw Frederick Roy McKinney | |
| 235 | Sunday Afternoon in Clarion County, Pennsylvania, some years later. Beer Siblings from left to right; Harry Rhande, Kathern Mildred, John Wilber, and Dimple Marie. |
Dimple Marie Beer
Harry Rhande. Beer John Wilber Beer Kathern Mildred Beer | |
| 236 | Surviving Soldiers Civil War Veterans, Sligo Borough, Clarion County, Pennsylvania |
Anthony McKinney
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| 237 | Suzannah Stewart, Four Generations Son Samuel Edwin Hartman, Granddaughter Mary Agnes, Suzannah Stewart holding Great-Grandson, Edward Craig. |
Mary Agnes Hartman
Samuel Edwin Hartman Suzannah Stewart | |
| 238 | The 1718 Galbraiths Article by Dave Colwell in the August 2009 issue of The Red Tower, Clan Galbraith Association, Vol. XXX. No 4, ISSN 1059-4264) |
Andrew Galbraith
Humphrey Galbraith Humphrey Galbraith James Galbraith John Galbraith John Galbraith Rebecca Galbraith Robert Galbraith William Galbraith Humphrey Galbraith of Balgair Robert Galbraith of Dowish James Galbraith of Ramoran James Galbraith of Rateine (later Magevelin) A Natural Son James Galbraith the Gudman of Balgair, Scotland | |
| 239 | The Furling of the Flags After the Civil War General Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain of the Union Army wrote two aricles on the events of April 12, 1865 at Appomattox Courthouse, Virginia. This article is a somewhat more detailed account than the more poignant "The Last Salute of the Army of Northern Virginia" which follows below. |
John A. Stewart
Milton Stewart Nathan Stewart | |
| 240 | The Gettysburg Address "Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether this nation, or any nation, so conceived and so dedicated, can long ¬endure. We are met on a great battle-field of that war. We have come to dedicate a por¬tion of that field, as a final resting place for those who here gave their lives that this nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this. But, in a larger sense, we cannot dedicate – we cannot consecrate - we cannot hallow - this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have conse¬crated it, far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can nev¬er forget what they did here. It is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the un¬finished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us - that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion - that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain - that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth." ******** World-famous speech delivered by President Abraham Lincoln at the dedication (Nov. 19, 1863) of the National Cemetery at Gettysburg, Pa., the site of one of the decisive battles of the American Civil War (July 1–3, 1863). The main address at the dedication ceremony was one of two hours, delivered by Edward Everett, the best-known orator of the time. In the wake of such a performance, Lincoln’s brief speech would hardly seem to have drawn notice. However, despite some criticism from his opposition, it was widely quoted and praised and soon came to be recognized as one of the classic utterances of all time, a masterpiece of prose poetry. On the day following the ceremony. Everett himself wrote to Lincoln, “I wish that I could flatter myself that I had come as near to the central idea of the occasion in two hours as you did in two minutes.” |
Jeremiah Zachariah Brown
Colonel Calvin Augustus Craig James Harvey Craig David F. Polliard | |
| 241 | The Last Salute of the Army of Northern Virginia This is a moving account of the events on April 12, 1865, a rainy and cloudy day, at Appomattox Courthouse, Virginia. A must reading for those who had forebears in the Civil War. The 155th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry was present on that day and included Company G with men recruited from Richland, Salem and Washington Townships and Company H with men recruited from the Rimersburg area, all in Clarion County, Pennsylvania. See comments in the Notes Section of Nathan Stewart. There is also a high degree of probability that Washington Adams Craig was present that day as at the time of Lee's surrender earlier, he was with Corp. G.H. Clover, privates J.C. Barnett, A.G. Lewellen, C.M. Smith, G. Kribbs, of Company K, and William Eich, of Company E, all of the 155th Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, in the town of Appomattox where they captured 116 Rebels, including sixteen officers, of whom a colonel was the highest in rank, and marched them into the Union lines. Of the two swords Mr. Craig secured at this time, one he gave to his second lieutenant and the other he still has in his possession. It is not known whether Lewis Hartman was present that day as he had been captured earlier and was a Prisoner of War at Andersonville, Georgia. See additional comments in the Notes Section of Milton Stewart, who fought with the 155th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry and was killed at Petersburg, Virginia on June 16, 1864. |
Washington Adams Craig
Lewis Hartman John A. Stewart Milton Stewart Nathan Stewart | |
| 242 | The Legend of John Nickolas Emerick | ||
| 243 | The Plantation of Ulster. In a figurative sense the term "Plantation" is applied to the establishment of new colonies of English, Welsh and Scots in Ireland, chiefly carried out by Elizabeth and James I. The preliminary ground work was, however, laid by Henry VIII, and the first steps were taken during the reigns of Edward VI and Mary. |
Sir William Stewart
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| 244 | The Search for the Forebear of John McKinney born about 1788. John the father (forebear) born 1748 in Ireland and John the son born about 1788 in Pennsylvania. |
John McKinney
John McKinney | |
| 245 | The Search for William Stewart II. The Search for William Stewart II, son of Lieutenant William Stewart of Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. |
Alexander Stewart
Lieutenant William Stewart William Stewart, II | |
| 246 | The Stewart Family by Heber Ivo Rankin |
Heber Ivo Rankin
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| 247 | The Thomas Henry Simpson Memorial Institute for Research University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan |
Thomas Henry Simpson
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| 248 | The War of 1812 Comments on volunteers who served in the First Regiment Pennsylvania Militia from Armstrong County, Indiana County and Venango County. Some of the volunteers from Armstrong County and Venango County resided in the area that later became Clarion County. |
John Jack
David McKibben David McKibben | |
| 249 | The Whiskey Rebellion 1791-1795 William Stewart (1738-1811) and his family resided near the South Fork of Cross Creek in Hopewell Township, Washington County, Pennsylvania during the time of the Whiskey rebellion, 1791-1795. His son Galbraith Stewart and his family resided in nearby West Middletown during that period. When President George Washington led the militia into Western Pennsylvania in 1794 they camped at the nearby city of Monongahela. I thought it appropriate to record some of the events of that period. |
Lieutenant William Stewart
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| 250 | Thomas Henry Simpson |
Thomas Henry Simpson
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