Notes


Note    N623         Index
Per source, this is a very interesting French Huguenot family. The immigrant ancestor David Demarest and his wife Maria were married at Middleburg in the Netherlands in 1643 and lived there for several years. But by 1651 they had removed to Mannheim, Germany, wehre French and Belgian Protestants were offered protection. David became an elder of the reorganized French church at Mannheim. In 1663, fearing hostile invasion of the Palatinate by Catholic princes, they sailed to America on the ship _Bontekoe_ (The Spotted Cow). They settled at first in a Huguenot village on Staten Island, but in 1665 moved to Harlem, where David Demarest was appointed to the position of Overseer on 6 August 1667. In 1678, he organized a French colony in New Jersey. This source traces his line through a younger brother of Jean Des Marest b 1645, David Des Marest b1651. He indicates that there is (was) a Demarest Family Association which published a genealogy around 1965, of which he has copied some pages.

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Note    N624         Index
Graduated from Mesa High School, and as a registered nurse, from the Nurses Training College of Huntington Memorial Hospital at Pasadena, California.
Birth information reported as 21 Jul 1910 in Mesa, Maricopa County, Arizona in Find-a-grave.

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Note    N625         Index
William was a mortician in Missouri, and later went to Devner,where he entered the building contracting industry.


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Note    N626         Index
Of South Annville township.

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Note    N627         Index
Membership number in Pennsylvania SAR was 1021.

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Note    N628         Index
Farmer, mennonite.

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Note    N629         Index
Alternate source date 10 December 1888.

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Note    N630         Index
Last name from "Patriot Families". There are numerous court records of her work to settle her husband Daniel's estate in the 1817-1818 time frame. Page 53 of Will Book C indicates that accounts with John Coy, Peter Bell, J. Vanwincle, P. Atherton, W. Beaver, J Greenwell and R. McLure had been identified.

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Note    N631         Index
Described in source as "of Andelfing".

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Note    N632         Index
of Watertown, Mass.

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Note    N633         Index
Living with Urban David Coy.

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Note    N634         Index
She shared the pioneer days in Cedar township with her husband, came from North Carolina and used to tell the story as she remembered it, of the raid of Tarleton's men on her father's home andhow the British carried off everything they wanted from the house and cut the rim of her mother's spinning wheel. Six sons and daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Latimer had been married in Tenessee, all but one of whom later followed their parents to Knox county. Five children came with them and they as they all figure in this story, I will name them: George, John, David, an unmarried daughter, Susan, and a widowed daughter, Mr. Sarah L. Boren.

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Note    N635         Index
Residence was Grants Pass, Oregon 97526. SSN was 562-01-6995, which was issued before 1951 in California.

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Note    N636         Index
An Episcopal clergyman, of Newport, Pennsylvania.