Thursday, March 31, 2016

Lisa Beata Berg (1814 - 1868)

My third great-grandmother
B. 16 January 1814      Bro, Varmland, Sweden
D.  30 June 1868      Ed, Varmland, Sweden

Father:  Jan Johan Berg
Mother:  Eva Petronella Bredahl

Husband:  Carl Andersson Rud, married c.1835

Children:
Carl Johan Rudd  1837
Anders Gustav Rudd  1839
Frans Frithiof Rudd  1842
Fredrik Ferdinand Rudd  1845
Axel Wilhelm Rudd  1848
Eva Maria Rudd  1856

I have no information about Lisa's life, but I do know that she is our only link to many, many ancestors going back hundreds of years. I do know a bit about her parents, so I will include them here.


Jan Johan Berg  (1781 - 1811)

My fourth great-grandfather
Born: 11 August 1781     Smaland, Sweden
Died:  9 March 1837    Bro, Varmland, Sweden
Married:  5 May 1811    "the Village" Varmland, Sweden

Eva Petronella Bredahl  (1779 - 1855)

My fourth great-grandmother
Born:  25 December 1779   Orebro, Varmland, Sweden  
Died:  12 January 1855    Bro, Varmland, Sweden

Johan and Eva seemed to have moved around a lot, but I don't know if that was common in those days. I do have information about where they lived. This information came from a Swedish website and I had to do a bit of guessing on the translation, but I think it's all right.

   1804  Johan moved from Smaland to Alvestad, Olserud, Varmland.
   1807  Johann moved to "The Village" where he began working for the Major and Knight Wilhelm
             Von Krusenstierna at North Skanne. Eva may have worked for this person also.
   1812  They moved to Bro.
   1817-1825  They resided in Bergtorp, and then North Ostbro
   1825-1839  Emaus, Vastbro
   1839-1840  Eva lived in Sandy Ridge (I think this was translated to English by the website), Bro
   1840-1841  Eva lived in Remene, Bro
   1841-1847  Eva lived in Southern Sjole, Bro
   1847-1855  Eva lived in Sater, Western Brosater' Bro
   

Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Staying Organized

I knew ahead of time that I would be away from home for a while this winter, so I pre-wrote some posts and scheduled them for future release. On top of that, I got lazy this month. Then I found out last night that Blogger did not release my posts as scheduled, nicely spread out over two months, and instead pretty much dumped them all at once. That's my excuse for the long break. I'll try not to let it happen again.

So far, I've covered my great-great-grandparents, also called "second great-grandparents" and some of my third great-grandparents that are dead ends as far as further information goes. Who knows? I might some day find out more about some of them and I'll add it if it happens.

I've gone as far as I can with my mother's side of the family, but I have much more information about the families of seven third-great-grandparents, all from my father's side of the family. The ancestors of Grandpa Lou (Laurel) came from Sweden, but the further back I go, the more they spread out, through all of Scandinavia and then to eastern Europe. Grandma Alta's family were mostly very early American immigrants from England. As I go farther back in time, I can see that they came from all parts of England and were involved in all the major events in the history of that country.

I have discovered that we have a pretty amazing family history with lots of nobility on both sides. Because of this, there were lots of records kept. Our ancestors were important enough that they are mentioned in lots of historical resources, but for right now I am just making note of names and dates. When I've got all I can find of that kind of info, I plan to spend time looking into all that history and figuring out just who everyone was and why they were important.

It is pretty obvious that this is a project that will last the rest of my life, but it's one that I look forward to working on every day!

Kathy


Monday, February 1, 2016

Allen Benson Waters 1847-1929

B.  12 June 1847   Marietta, Cobb County, Georgia
D.  31 July 1929   Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah
Buried: Richfield, Sevier County, Utah

Father:  Larkin Tolliver Waters
Mother:  Elizabeth Melinda Benson

Siblings:
   George Robert Waters  1849
   John Henry Waters  1852
   Marietta Waters  1855
   Martha Malinda Waters  1857
   Larkin Tolliver Waters, Jr.  1859

Mar.    30 November 1864     Mary Jakeman (1844-1893)
Mar.   29 August 1894    Betsy Alice Briggs

Children:
   Allen George Waters  1865
   Mary Ann Elizabeth Waters  1868
   Marthy Marier Waters  1870
   Sarrah Ellen Waters  1872
   James Robert Waters  1875
   Larkin Henry Waters 1877
   Susan Netey Waters  1881
   Ralph Waters  1883
   Frederick Waters  1887
   Vivian Waters  1892
   Carlyle Benson Waters 1895
   Mark Rollen Waters  1897
   Pearl Etta Waters  1899
   Dora Viola Waters  1903
   Lillian Waters  1905





Allen was the oldest of six children. When he was about six years old his parents decided to venture to the California goldfields.  When they got there, Allen was seven, George was five, and John was two years old. Three more children were born in California: Marietta, Martha, and Larkin Jr. An adopted sister, Elizabeth, is also mentioned in Larkin Tolliver Water's will.

Larkin died just before Allen's 14th birthday. The baby Larkin has just turned two. His mother was a long way from her family. They had been in California for about eight years. Going back to Georgia was not an option. Allen's father had been a hard worker and a very good provider. He had many assets that needed attention. It was a very difficult time for the family. His mother married Edmund S. Barnes on 18 September 1861. Their son Edmund was born in 1863. After a lengthy legal battle to settle Larkin's estate, the family left California.

In 1864, Allen was in Utah where he married Mary Jakeman on 30 November. Allen and Mary are found in the 1870 census of Minersville, Utah, with three children. His occupation is listed as farmer. Early LDS church records show that Allen was baptized in 1866 by Mary's uncle, Joseph Field.

[The following was written about Larkin Tolliver Waters, Jr., Allen Benson Waters' youngest brother. This would have been Alta Sterndahl's great-uncle. I am including it because I think it gives an idea of what life in Utah was like in those days.]

Larkin Tolliver Waters, Jr. was born on 10 May 1859, in El Dorado county, California, the sixth child of Larkin Tolliver Waters and Elizabeth Melinda Benson. His father died when he was less than a year old. Larkin is shown with his widowed mother and brothers and sisters in the 1860 census at Mud Creek, El Dorado County, California.  His mother subsequently married to a Mr. Barnes.

The family moved to Utah about 1863 and settled in the Beaver County area.  In about a year, his mother and Mr. Barnes moved to Nebraska for a short stay before returning to Utah and homesteading near Joseph, in Sevier County.

Larkin's whereabouts is not further accounted until the 1880 census, when he is shown at 21 years old, single, working as a laborer, and living with his brother, Allen Benson Waters and his family, north of Minersville in Beaver County.

About 26 December 1882, Larkin Jr. was married in Beaver, Utah, to Lucy Ann Roberts, who was born 24 November 1863, in Beaver, a daughter of Williams and Damaris Roberts, immigrants from England. Larkin and Lucy had seven children, six boys and one girl, all born in Beaver.

About the turn of the century, Larkin changed the spelling of his surname to Watters, adding an additional 'T'. This was to avoid a nephew by the same name from receiving and opening his mail and inadvertently cashing his checks.

Larkin Jr. was an experienced timber man. He cleared out dead timber from the mountains, cut new trees, and hauled the lumber to Beaver and throughout Utah and Nevada.  The lumber was needed for building homes and barns, for fence posts, and to shore up mines.  He took specifications and orders for the building of barns. The poles and framework were cut and numbered so they could be erected methodically.

He could fell a tree on a "handkerchief", according to the words of his grandson. Because of his skill he was asked to remove a tree that was growing between two houses and causing damage.  He cut down the tree with ease and accuracy. In later years, when trucks were available for hauling lumber, he persisted in using a team and wagon for the job - this, at the age of 79.

He liked to work with wood; it held a peculiar fascination for him. He liked to whittle and carve.  He made chains, animals, and many different things as he sat and spent the time of day with his friends. Children were delighted with the whistles he carved from green limbs for them to blow and play with.

While Larkin Jr. and his boys were out cutting timber, they took time to fish. Kents Lake, up Beaver Canyon, was a favorite spot. They caught bucketsful. Rabbit and deer hunting were also popular. He taught the skills of hunting and fishing to his sons, and they were also avid sportsmen throughout their lives.

Freighting was a profitable business in early Utah, and Milford was regarded as a freighting center after the advent of the railroad. Many young men earned enough money to help support their families. Sanpete and Sevier Valleys had an abundance of farm produce - grain, flour, cured meats, dried fruits, eggs, molasses, hay and lumber - all of which were needed in Nevada and distant mining towns. On return trips, freighters carried gold and silver bullion, whiskey, and, often, passengers.

Long before and after the railroad came to Milford in 1880, it was a focal point of all freighting by team and wagons. Some of the old roads are still traceable, and, in some places, are 100 yards wide. The freighters always stopped where there was water, if possible, but they always hauled water along with them in case night overtook them where there was no water. They tried to travel in groups so they would have help over bad roads and in case of robbery. Stories of his experiences were obtained from him when he was 81 years old and living in Beaver, and are excepted below.

On one occasion, Larkin carried several passengers and an unusual commodity over a road fraught with robbers.There was a barber who wished to take his barber chair from Pioche, Nevada, to Frisco, Utah. He offered Mr. Watters $75 to do this for him. Besides the chair, there were three men who traveled with him, and the trip netted him $400. It was rumored that on the road by way of Desert Springs, a trench had been dug, probably by robbers who planned to hold up the wagons. The barber was very nervous and begged Mr. Watters to take a different route, but Mr. Watters was determined to go by way of Desert Springs, so that was the road they took. Sure enough, the trench was there. How could they get across? They took the end gates from the wagon and made a bridge across the trench. They pushed the wagon over the bridge and made the horses jump the trench. Soon they were on their way. The men didn't get much sleep the rest of the trip; they were watching for desparados along the way.

Sitting in a wagon, driving a team of horses, in all kinds of weather, the heat of the desert and driving rain and snow were trying ordeals. Larkin told of the clothing needed at times and the value of human life. Sometimes the weather was extremely cold, roads muddy, and snow deep. In this kind of weather men had to be dressed warmly. They wore blue or red flannel drawers (long sleeves and long legs), heavy knit hose, ear muffs, heavy caps. They carried extra fur robes and heavy bedding. It was one of these very cold nights spent on the desert when Mr. Watters had this experience. The snow was drifting and it was extremely cold. He knew it was foolish to go further so he prepared to settle down for the night. He made his bed in the wagon. His feet were so cold that he had to take off his boots and wrap his feet up in old pieces of bedding and clothing to keep them warm. Even then he couldn't sleep, so he got up, built a fire, and made some hotcakes and had something warm to drink. While doing this he heard some shots. Looking up he saw a stranger carrying the body of a man. He saw him throw the body into a nearby gulch. Mr. Watters said it would have been quite unwise for anyone to be curious enough to investigate such an incident.

The great distanced traveled necessitated his staying at hotels and roadway inns some nights. There was usually plenty of excitement at these stopover places where all types of individuals found shelter, especially in mining areas. there were plenty of badmen all along the road. One evening a number of men were visiting in the hotel bar in a Nevada town. A stranger entered the room, throwing a knife at the bartender. Fortunately, the knife lodged in the edge of the bar. Someone shot out the lights; all was in darkness. The next morning very early, Mr. Watters crawled out on his hands and knees so as not to be seen. Outside he saw five men lying dead. There were too many dead men for him, so he hurried on his way.

Not all of the stopover rest places were exciting and so full of commotion. Those closer to his home in Utah were highly regarded. Scattered ranches along the way were welcome sights. Martha Armstrong - lovingly called Auntie by people of Milford - lived at here father's ranch, Smyth Springs, the stopping place of travelers. Here was good water, a good meal and bed. A lantern was always lighted and hung outside to guide the weary traveler. Later, John Williams built a hotel, with a bar and dance hall, where the miner and freighter found recreation and would swing their partners in a lively quadrille. Larkin liked to tell about an excellent Negro cook at the Milford roadhouse. The cook would go out hunting chicken hawks and prepare them so that they were the best chicken dinners Larkin had ever tasted.

For shorter and lighter hauls, Larkin used the buckboard wagon. The buckboard was a lighter wagon and could be drawn over the ground much faster than the ordinary one. Either one or two teams were used according to the size of the load. It was later used to haul supplies to and from the mines, mills and ranches. Seats could be swung across the wagon to accommodate passengers. Mr. Watters drove one of these wagons to the RobRoy mine north of Beaver from Milford or Frisco with supplies and passengers.

Mr. Watters told a vivid story about how a fellow freighter, a Scandinavian from Richfield, outfoxed a would-be robber. The freighter was about to return home from Pioche, Nevada, after having sold a very valuable cargo and a team, receiving his payment in gold. Fearing he might be robbed on his return trip, he ingeniously hid his gold by boring a hole in the holster of the wagon and hiding the gold there. This seemed almost a premonition, for he had not traveled very far when he saw a lone rider coming over the brow of the hill. The rider soon caught up with him and demanded the gold that he had seen him receive for his cargo and team. The teamster produced all he had in his purse, some thirty dollars, and truthfully said that was all he had on his person. The rider, unable to find more and sorely disappointed, ordered the Scandinavian to get off the wagon and dance. He danced until he was almost exhausted and told the bandit that he could dance no more. He might as well kill him outright than to torture him that way. He was then ordered to get back on the wagon, and as he did, he managed to get hold of an old sawed-off shotgun. Quickly he turned the gun on the robber and ordered him to dance. The robber then danced until he could no longer dance, and the freighter took his horse, tied it to his wagon, and drove away, leaving the bandit behind and too tired to follow. After catching up with another freighter, he turned the horse loose.

Larkin Jr. and his sons did only light farming. They were away from home much of the time, involved with lumber and freighting jobs. This left his wife Lucy alone for months at a time. The family had a charge account at the local co-op were Lucy could purchase anything she needed. Larkin Jr. had good credit and he always paid his bills and debts. Lucy sewed, cooked, and helped others to pass the time while Larkin and the boys were away. She was very particular in the preparation of meals and in everything she did. Sometimes toward evening, she would stand by the gate for hours, waiting and hoping to see Larkin coming down the road.

In 1909, Lucy and Larkin moved to St. George, Utah. They lived there for over a year and Larkin freighted from there to sustain the family.

About 1910, they moved to Richfield. He hauled timber and salt from the Redmond area near Richfield, With Larkin in the freighting business, he liked to be on the go. He was used to traveling and moving. The family lived various other places, but in 1920 they returned to Beaver to stay. They purchased a four-room log cabin at the northern end of Beaver, just out of the city limits.

Lucy was baptized a member of the LDS church on her eighth birthday. Larkin Jr, was baptized when he was 65 years old.






Friday, January 29, 2016

Mary Catherine Barber 1868-1954

Born:  1 September 1868   Lebanon, Missouri
Died:  22 May 1954   Visalia, California

Father:  Joel A. Barber
Mother:  Susan America Bolles

Siblings:
   Lorenza Dow Barber   1864
   Joel Nathan Barber   1867
   Albert Even Barber   1871
   Annie May Barber   1872
   Amos Porter Barber   1875
   Isaac Murrell Barber   1877

Married:  John Alexander Garland  (about 1888)  Lebanon, Missouri

Children:
   Mabel Claire Garland   1889
   Amy Ethel Garland   1891
   Nellie Jane Garland   1893
   Augustus Hamlin Garland   1895
   Pearl America Garland   1897
   Gordon Hickman Garland   1899
   Hazel Glenne Garland   1902
   Faerie Belle Garland   1905

(For photos, see the post for John Alexander Garland.)

I don't have much information about great-grandmother Mary Catherine (but I do know that she went by Mollie.)  I do have a copy of her obituary, probably from the Visalia paper, so I will share that.

Mary C. Garland Dies Saturday

Mrs. Mary Catherine Garland, 84, a native of Lebanon, Missouri, died Saturday evening in a local hospital.

Mrs. Garland, mother of Gordon Garland of Woodlake, the former speaker of the state assembly, moved to Woodlake with her late husband John A. Garland in 1928. She moved to Visalia in 1944 and had made her home at 2619 Fairview Drive since that time.

She had been hospitalized for two weeks prior to her death.

She was a member of the Baptist Church of Oak Grove, Missouri.

She is survived by six daughters, Mrs. Mabel Carroll of Los Angeles, Mrs. Ethel Miller and Mrs. Phyllis Van Dusen [Faerie Belle went by a variety of names. Wouldn't you, if you were stuck that that one?] of Visalia, Mrs. Neil Kelly of Salinas, Mrs. Pearl Adams of Glendale and Mrs. Hazel Martz of Hollywood; a son, Gordon Garland; a brother, Amos Barber of Lebanon, Missouri; 19 grandchildren, 38 great-grandchildren and six great-great grandchildren.

Funeral services will be tomorrow at 2 p.m. in the Hadley Chapel. Burial will be in the Woodlake Cemetery.

Joel A. Barber and Susan America Bolles

Mary Catherine's mother was Susan America Bolles, about whom I know almost nothing except that she was born in Missouri and died in November of 1912 in Lebanon, Missouri. They were married at the home of her father, R. T. Bolles, on 23 July 1863.

Her husband Joel, however, left us an interesting story.  Joel A. Barber was born 5 May 1844 in Arkansas. His father, J. U. Barber, was a doctor in Virginia. His mother Celia (?Fraser?) was born in Virginia in about 1818. Dr. Barber had either already died or had gone away by the 1860 census, because Celia is listed as the head of household. Her mother's name may have been Nancy, but that's all we know because the Stone and Taney County court houses were burned down and all the records were destroyed during the Civil War.

At the time of that 1860 census, Joel A. Barber was listed as a 16 year old laborer. In December of 1861, Joel enlisted as a Private and then a Corporal  in the H company of the Missouri Infantry and also the 11th Missouri Cavalry commanded by Colonel John S. Phelps. He was discharged on May 12, 1862 at Springfield, Missouri, after being "disabled by measles, resulting in affection of back and head" in Rolla, Missouri, in February of 1862.

Later in 1862, he married a Polly Smith but she apparently died soon afterward. Then he married Susan Bolles in the summer of 1863.

We know about his Civil War service because he applied for a pension at age 43 on November 26, 1887, claiming that he had been a farmer on Bennet's Mill Road before he enlisted but he was now partly disabled because of the results of contacting measles while a soldier. According to a report of the Adjutant General's Office, he had enrolled again in August of 1863 for three years, but they found no evidence of disability. In February of 1888, he sent a request that his medical record be released  to the Bureau of Pensions.

In 1890, at age 46, he tried again, claiming that he was "now unable to earn a support by reason of disease of throat and lungs, rheumatism also back and head." This form is called a "Declaration for Invalid Pension" so it seems to me that he might have been awarded the pension the first time and then had it taken away.

In May of 1898, he responded to a questionnaire for the Department of Interior, Bureau of Pensions asking if he was married, who he was married to, what proof he had of the marriage, if he had ever been married before, and the names and birth dates of any children he had.

In 1900 he requested that the Pension office order him "to appear before Medical Board at Marshfield, Missouri, for examination in this claim." I don't know what came of this.

On May 21, 1912, Joel tried again, this time under the provisions of the Act of May 11, 1912. His doctors submitted an affidavit stating that Joel's kidneys were not working properly, he had cancer of the nose, an area of "cardiac dullness" and irregular heartbeat, shortness of breath on exertion that prevented him from doing more than a little very light work.

Mary Catherine died in November of 1912.  In February of 1913 he married a woman named Missouri Sickles.

In May of 1914, Joel submitted his family bible in an effort to prove his age, which was 70 at that time. It seems that he finally got his pension, because I have the copy of a form stating that his pension was now stopped because he died on April 23, 1916. His last pension payment was $23 on February 4, 1916.

Later that month, Joel's doctors submitted a request for reimbursement for their bills. On the same day, Missouri Barber's daughter and son-in-law submitted an affidavit stating that although Missouri had been married to a J. H. Warren, he died in 1893. She then married J.W. Sickles, but he had died in June of 1912. Then she had married Joel Barber in February of 1913, but that now he had died. Missouri Barber was now claiming Joel's pension. Apparently, the government had doubts about Missouri's claim, because in January of 1918, her daughter filed another affidavit swearing that the previous husband had indeed died as had been stated before. In June of 1918, three different long-time acquaintances of Missouri swore that they were present at his death and burial. The government must have had some reason to doubt that her marriage to Joel was legal.

So that's where the story ends. Joel lived 72 years and claimed to be at least partially disabled for almost 30 years. It looks like he did collect some pension a few of those years. I don't know if Missouri Barber ever collected any money from the government. This week was the first time I had ever gone through all of this paperwork, but I do know that Mom told me once that a woman had tried to make a fraudulent claim for her great-grandfather's Civil War pension. I have to wonder about it all. Joel's adult children were living right there in the same small town. Why weren't they involved in any of this? Were they the reason the government doubted the legality of the marriage?

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Mary Jakeman 1844-1893

B. 8 June 1844   Redditch, Worcestershire
D. 26 February 1893   Beaver, Utah

Father:  James Jakeman
Mother:  Ann Field

Siblings:
   Joseph Field       1831  (half-brother)
   Henry Jakeman       1834
   Sarah Jakeman       1836
   William Jakeman      1838      William and Elizabeth were
   Elizabeth Jakeman     1838         twins who died at birth.
   Eleanor Jakeman      1839
   Susan Jakeman        1842
   Edward Jakeman      1848
   David Jakeman        1851
   James Thomas Jakeman   1853

Married:  30 November 1864  to Allen Benson Waters

Children:
   Allen George Waters     1865
   Mary Ann Elizabeth Waters     1867
   Martha M. Waters     1870
   Sarah Ellen Waters     1872
   James Robert Waters     1875
   Larkin Henry Waters     1877
   Susan Nettie Waters     1881
   Ralph Waters     1883
   Fredrick Waters     1887
   Vivian Waters     1892     (Died at 6 months old.)



Mary was born in Worcestershire, England. During her childhood, most of her family converted to the Mormon religion after listening to missionaries who had traveled from the US to England. In 1863, when Mary was 19, she immigrated to the US with her mother, her brother James and her sister Susan. They sailed to New York and then made their way to Florence, Nebraska, where they joined the wagon train headed for Utah, led by the Daniel D. McArthur Company.

They settled in Grafton, Utah. Mary's older brothers Joseph and Henry and her older sister Sarah had preceded them to Utah.

Monday, January 25, 2016

John Alexander Garland 1862-1936

Born:  15 July 1862    Dairy Station, Westmoreland, Pennsylvania
Died:  June 1936    Woodlake, California

Father:  John Marietta Garland
Mother:  Mary Jane Williams

Siblings:
   Martin W. Garland
   Silas E. Garland
   Hickman Garland
   Christiana Garland
   Ulysses Garland
   Grant Garland       (there last two were twins)

Married:   Mary Catherine Barber   about 1888    in Lebanon, Missouri

Children:
   Mabel Claire Garland   1889
   Amy Ethel Garland   1891
   Nellie Jane Garland   1893
   Augustus Hamlin Garland   1895
   Pearl America Garland   1897
   Gordon Hickman Garland   1899
   Hazel Glenne Garland   1902
   Faerie Belle Garland   1905

About 1899 - the youngest is Grandma Peggy (Pearl)




John and Mary Catherine, known as Molly, had a farm outside of Lebanon, Missouri, but John went to work at a store in town when Peggy was a young girl.  He also filled in as pastor when the traveling preacher was not in town. They left Missouri for California in about 1908.

John's father, John Marietta Garland, was born 27 February 1823. I don't know where. He died 2 March 1901 in Lebanon, Missouri, and was buried at the Flatwoods Cemetery in Lebanon.  His father's name was Jacob Garland, who died at 80 years of age and is also buried at Flatwood Cemetery.

John's mother, Mary Jane Williams, was born 5 June 1826 in Dronfield, Derbyshire, England, and died 2 April 1896 in Lebanon. She is buried next to her husband. 

This brings me to another family branch dead end.







Wednesday, January 20, 2016

Just for fun... William the Conqueror, my 27th great-grandfather

William FitzRobert I, William the Conqueror + Matilda of Flanders ---> Henry

Henry I "Beauclerc" King of England + Matilda of Scotland ---> Matilda

Empress Matilda + Geoffroy V Plantagenet, Count of Anjou, Maine, and Mortain ---> Henry

Henry II "Curtmantle" King of England + Eleanor of Aquitaine ---> John

John "Lackland" King of England + Isabelle of Angouleme ---> Henry

Henry III Plantagenet, King of England + Eleanor of Provence ---> Edward

Edward I Plantagenet, "Longshanks" King of England + Eleanor of Castile ---> Edward

Edward II Plantagenet, King of England + Isabella of France ---> Edward

Edward III Plantagenet, King of England + Phillipa de Hainault ---> John

John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster + Katherine Swynford ---> Henry

Cardinal Henry Beaufort, Bishop of Winchester + Alice FitzAlan, Lady Charleton ---> Jane

Jane Beaufort + Sir Edward Stradling ---> Henry

Sir Henry Stradling + Elizabeth verch William ---> Thomas

Thomas Stradling, Esq. + Janet Mathew ---> Jane

Jane Stradling + Sir William Griffith, of Penrhyn ---> Elizabeth

Elizabeth Griffith, of Penrhyn + Sir John Cilsant Phillips ---> John

Sir John Phillips, Jr. + (unknown) ---> Roger

Roger Phillips + Margareta Shuker ---> Martha

Martha Phillips + Edward Jenkins ---> Martha

Martha Jenkins + William Eaton ---> Daniel

Daniel Eaton + Mary Ingalls ---> Martha

Martha Eaton + Peter Emmons, Jr. ---> Joseph

Joseph Emmons + Sarah Holmes ---> Joseph

Joseph Morehead Emmons + Sarah Farrin ---> Mary

Mary Emmons + Abraham Wilkins ---> James

James Wilson Wilkins + Adeline Sophia Atkins ---> Judson

Judson Heber Wilkins + Mary Ann Elizaeth Waters --->  Mary

Mary Alta Wilkins + Laurel Ernest Sterndahl ---> Kenneth

Kenneth Laurel Sterndahl + Peggy Sharon Adams ---> Kathleen

Kathleen Laurel Sterndahl - Dennis Scott Sterndahl - Nicole Lynne Sterndahl



This is just a chart of our link to William the Conqueror and his kingly descendents. For more info, I suggest you go to: www.historic-uk.com and then go to their timeline of the Kings and Queens of England and Britain. Then skip down to William the Conqueror in 1066. Or, for even more info, look up individuals on Google.j