Virginia Woolwine
#1328, b. c 1875
Father | John Woolwine b. c 1853 |
Mother | Margaret Jennie Doyle b. 1851, d. a 1875 |
Birth* | c 1875 | Virginia Woolwine was born c 1875 at Montgomery CO, VA. |
She was the daughter of John Woolwine and Margaret Jennie Doyle. |
Last Edited | 7 Sep 2016 |
Lucy A. Brumfield
#1355, b. 1875
Birth* | 1875 | Lucy A. Brumfield was born in 1875 at Montgomery CO, VA. |
Marriage* | 1895 | She married George Perry Doyle, son of John B. Doyle and Mary Ellen Jewell, in 1895 at IA. |
Family | George Perry Doyle b. May 1861, d. 1927 | |
Children |
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Last Edited | 7 Sep 2016 |
Lyman Johnson Needham
#374, b. 5 Mar 1875, d. 2 Jul 1950
Father | Leslie Benjamin Needham b. 21 Jul 1851, d. 6 Oct 1927 |
Mother | Phoebe Ellen Lawyer b. 15 Feb 1850, d. 15 Feb 1918 |
Burial* | Lyman Johnson Needham was buried; Albert Lee, MN. | |
Birth* | 5 Mar 1875 | He was born on 5 Mar 1875 at Durant, Butler County, IA. |
He was the son of Leslie Benjamin Needham and Phoebe Ellen Lawyer. | ||
Death* | 2 Jul 1950 | Lyman Johnson Needham died on 2 Jul 1950 at age 75. |
Last Edited | 7 Sep 2016 |
Elizabeth Beck
#1079, b. 3 Nov 1875, d. 8 Jun 1967
Father | Christian Beck b. 17 Aug 1844, d. 1931 |
Mother | Elizabeth Sellen b. 18 Dec 1852 |
Birth* | 3 Nov 1875 | Elizabeth Beck was born on 3 Nov 1875 at Burlington, WI. |
She was the daughter of Christian Beck and Elizabeth Sellen. | ||
Marriage* | 10 Jan 1899 | Elizabeth Beck married Anton Dries on 10 Jan 1899 at Ashton, IA. |
Death* | 8 Jun 1967 | Elizabeth Beck died on 8 Jun 1967 at Ashton, IA, at age 91. |
Family | Anton Dries b. 30 Jan 1869, d. 30 Jan 1953 | |
Children |
Last Edited | 7 Sep 2016 |
Eldridge Wade Bandy
#1429, b. 19 Nov 1875, d. 8 Oct 1924
Father | Lewellen Allen Bandy b. 29 Apr 1856, d. Jan 1922 |
Mother | Mary Susan Doyle b. 4 Nov 1858, d. 5 Dec 1935 |
Charts | descendants of Richard (1722-1795) |
Person-Note* | NOTE: I, Donna O'Neill will copy the following in it's entirety which includes information on all of my Grandparents, Eldridge and Iva's children. MY MEMORIES ABOUT ELDRIDGE AND IVIA BANDY AND FAMILIES By eldest daughter, Virgie Bandy Carroll 1973 My earliest recollections about Mama and Papa relate back 73 years ago when I was four years old. They had been living in Thorpe, Iowa, a small incorporated village which consisted of six or eight homes. Here Papa was working as a Section Foreman for the Chicago and Great Western Railroad, and this is the town in which I was born. At that time my Uncle Oak was a young man, unmarried, and he drove about nine miles to Manchester in a horse drawn buggy to get the Doctor for Mama. He later said that was a long nine miles for horses do not travel as fast as cars. At that time Papa was probably 18 years old and Mama was 16, for they were married when they were very young. In later years after Howard and I were married, Mama told me about an incident that happened in Thorpe. In the year 1897 when the gold rush was on in California, numerous freight cars were hauled through Thorpe and a good many tramps would 'hitch' rides on top of these cars. At that time the conductors and trainmen let them ride free. One day when the train stopped at Thorpe to replenish the locomotive water tank, two tramps jumped off the cars and ambled towards my parent's home. This home was a duplex and living on one side were Sadie and Arthur McKinney and their baby Galen, and living on the other side were Papa, Mama and thier baby, Virgie. Sadie and Mama used a signal of knocking on a locked door if they were in danger and this Mama did when she saw the tramps coming. Sadie hurried into Mama's home and they both watched fearfully as the tramps came towards them. Mama grabbed a loaded revolver they always kept on hand and if they had attempted to break into the house she said she would have used it. Fortunately, Papa and Arthur came home early that day and when the tramps saw them they left in a hurry. Later in that year, Papa and Arthur were transfered to Dumont, Iowa where Papa was promoted to Foreman over a larger area of track. For the next six years both families lived in Dumont and were not separated until Papa was transferred to Milwaukee, Wisconsin. They were reunited when my parents moved to Huron, South Dakota. This was a life long friendship and in Huron they lived only four blocks apart. Before Sadie and Arthur moved from Dumont to Huron, little Galen died from a case of scarlet fever (at that time antibiotics had not been discovered). My brothers, Vernon and Gerald, were both born in Thorpe, Iowa. When our parents moved from Thorpe to Dumont, they lived upstairs in Grandma and Grandpa Needham's spacious home until they could move to a home of their own. In this home there was one large living room upstairs, possibly 25 feet in length, and 2 bedrooms. A stairway led off from the hallway and this was the exit down to Grandma and Grandpa's living quarters. There were also stairs on the outside of the house that led to the ground surface. I am sure that my mother had many a nice visit with Grandma while the men were off to work. [Note: My sister, Helen took pictures of this home when we made a trip to Dumont a few years ago.] It is evident that the upstairs in Grandma and Grandpa Needham's home became too crowded with three growing children, so they moved to the Clark house which was only about 300 ft. away. This was called the Clark house because they rented it from a man by the name of Clark. [Helen took a picture of this house, too, which contained two bedrooms, a living room and a kitchen.] Gladys was born here, so by this time there were 4 children in the family and 4 hungry mouths to feed. When Gladys was born, Mama had a case of scarlet fever and diphtheria, and those were trying days for all the family. Mama wasn't expected to live and she lost her vision for a few days. Grandma was her nurse, and we weren't allowed to go into her room, in fact we didn't see her for weeks. As a disinfectand, Grandma constantly burned tar on hot coals of fire which were removed from a cook stove. The smoke permeated the whole house and I don't think a pesky germ could have survived in it. At this time the house was heated by a cast iron cook stove and a cast iron heating stove which was in the living room. We lived in this home a couple of years and by that time I was six years old; then we moved to the 'top of the hill' in Dumont. This was a very small home, having only four rooms, but it had a large garden space behind it out of which Mama canned beans, peas, and corn, besides having all the fresh vegetables they wanted all summer. This home brings back many memories of the golden loaves of bread Mama would take from the oven and the many good times we had there. One evening in the winter time when deep snow was on the ground, Mama remarked that she would have to have some yeast cakes to bake bread the following morning. These were hard dried cakes of yeast as the Red Star of Fleishman's Yeast was not yet on the market. She told Vernon and me to go down to Uncle Ralph's store and get the yeast and gave us 4 cents to pay for them. On the way we played in the snow and lost the 4 cents, but Uncle Ralph was understanding and charged them. Then came the difficult part of telling Mama we lost the money as Papa was earning only $40 a month and 4 cents was 4 cents in any man's money. We both received a good paddling, and believe me, we never forgot it. Mama didn't own an electric powered washing machine until they moved to Huron. All the clothes were washed in a tub with a wash board. I can remember she had a copper boiler in which she boiled all her white clothes, always adding a tablespoon of lye to 'break the water'. Our lives were normal and the days were always full of fun. We were taken to Sunday School and Church every Sunday where Grandma Needham directed the choir in the Methodist church and Mama played the organ. This little church was only four blocks from our home and we all walked, every one in our best 'Bib and Tucker', and we always wore shoes when went to church. The rest of the week we went barefooted, which we loved. About once a week my mother would take us down to see Grandma Bandy. We liked to go there and see Grandma's beautiful flower garden and the big swing Grandpa had built for the grandchildren. They lived one block south and one block west of where Grandma Needham lived. Grandma Bandy always kept a large covered compote of prunes on her kitchen table and I am sure she didn't know what a healthful food of iron there was in it. Uncle Oak and Aunt Louie were supervising the telephone office in Dumont. Uncle Ralph and Aunt Zet weere both busy working in their mercantile and grocery store combined. Uncle Bill was the youngest brother, and was a favorite of all the Bandy family. Uncle Arl and Aunt Eva moved to Dubuque and we would only see them occasionally. It seems to me that our lives were all intertwined and everybody was so busy that they had no time for disagreements and this speaks well for a large family. The time arrived when my father, mother and 4 children would have to part with all these dear relatives for Papa was promoted to Assistant Road Master on the Wisconsin Division of the Chicago and Northwestern Railroad. Papa went first and located a house for us in Milwaukee, but this house was in a questionable neighborhood so after Mama followed with the children, she found a house in a respectable neighborhood. By that time I was seven years old and was in the second grade in school. Our good times in Milwaukee were memorable too. Mama was young and she enjoyed taking the family to Juneau Park of the Lake Michigan shore on Sundays. Here we enjoyed the picnic lunches and we especially enjoyed the Milwaukee museum, which was an unheard of privilege in Dumont, Iowa. We also rode on street cars which were propelled by a trolley. What a thrill that was! This trolley was a grooved metallic wheel or pulley carried on the end of a trolley pole and was held in contact with the current for the propulsion of the street car. 5 year old Vernon became quite efficient in jumping on street cars. He had a newspaper route and the news boys were allowed to ride free from one location to another. One time he got on the street car and went to the Northwestern Depot where he told a policeman his father worked there in the Depot. You can imagine my mother's consternation and panic when she discovered he was gone, and the relief she felt when the police called and said he had been found and my father would bring him home. Gerald was 'Grandma Needham's boy' and he liked to stay with Grandma and Grandpa as often as he was allowed. He had been staying with them during the summer vacation and when Mama returned from Milwaukee to take him home, he hid under the seat in the railroad station and they didn't find him until the train pulled into the station. Gladys had her special playmates in the neighborhood, but my mother was one who believed 'A bird in the hand is worth two in a bush' and she kept close surveillance over all of us. One time Gladys went to the neighbors to play with her little friend and when she came home Mama asked her what she did and she happily replied, "Oh, we had bee-ah [beer] and cookies for lunch". She was only three years old then and she was never allowed to play at that neighbor's again. The bee-ah did it! When I was in the second grade, I was blessed with a good head of hair. In fact, when my mother braided it the braids were about 14 inches long and 2 inches thick. On the way to school I was often taunted by a boy who delighted in pulling my braids. Finally, in desperation, I decided to get even with him. Close to our home another home was being built and there were bundles of laths in front of the house. I hid behind these bundles, coupled two lathes in my hands and as the boy went past I ran out and hit him in the middle of the back. Lo and behold, that boy crumpled to the ground -- fainted-- and I was petrified. I ran home and yelled, "Oh, I've killed him, I've killed him", and Mama ran outside but by the time she got there the boy had revived and ran away. Needless to say, the boy never bothered me again. One time we were visiting in Dumont and were only there a week when Mama recieved a message to come home. I shall never forget, when we entered the house it was all darkened with the lowered window shades and Papa sat there putting hot packs on one of his eyes. He had accidently gotten a cinder in his eye and let it go until it caused an ulcer. When we arrived, Mama said, "Eldridge, this is a case for the Doctor." However, the damage had been done and from then on he never had vision in that eye. After living a year in Milwaukee, we received word that Papa was due for another promotion. This time as Road Master with headquarters in Redfield, So. Dakota. This meant a lot of work for my mother for she had all the supervision of packing and moving the household goods. How she ever managed, I will never know, but perhaps her earlier experiences in life had educated her to the place where she could overcome any difficulty. Papa had a house rented in Redfield when we and the furniture arrived. It wasn't only a house, it was a real home with four healthy kids to fill it up. We still didn't have electric lights and we had to go back to using lamps. South Dakota was not as far advanced as Milwaukee for Milwaukee had gas lights. Neither did we have a sewage system and the traditional outhouse was located on the back of the lot. When we emptied dishwater, we poured it in a pail and took it to the back of the lot. [To those readers of this article, you must remember all these incidents happened seventy years ago, soon after the turn of the century]. Here again, we had one large cook stove and a large cast iron heating stove to heat the house, and lamp chimneys to clean. It was my work to clean the chimneys and make the beds, and Gladys and I would wash the dishes and wipe them. Gladys was still a little girl but she was learning. By this time the boys were old enough to chop the wood and bring it to the wood box. If they neglected it, Papa made them get out of bed, dress and do the unfinished work. We lived in Redfield two years and during those years we visited Uncle Will (Willis) and Aunt Emmy (Emma) Overturf, who lived in Doland, South Dakota on a farm. Uncle Will was Grandma Needham's youngest brother. They had a large family of children and we became very fond of all of them. Aunty Emmy was an English woman and could prepare the most delicious chicken, pastries, and a steamed English Christmas pudding that would melt in your mouth. [FROM DONNA -I don't usually inject anything - but I have the receipe for that Christmas pudding if anyone wants it - just email me]. We had fun jumping on the haystacks and chasing chickens and geese. After living in Redfield two years, we moved to Huron, So. Dak. because Papa was promoted to Road Master of the largest division in the state. This was a strenuous job for he had to ride trains all day long, standing on the platform of the last car and inspecting tracks. He supervised all foremen and helpers and was as strict with them as he was with his children, but everyone loved and respected him. It was in Huron that I saw the first bribe offered to my father. A promoter called at out home one evening and asked Papa if he would take on some laborers that he had brought up from the south and he handed him a ten dollar bill, but Papa firmly refused and told him to take back his money, that he wasn't interested. Again, my mother had a double responsibility, for Papa was gone on the road every day with the exception of working one day in the office keeping up his books. Our first home in Huron was on Ohio street which was only four blocks from the grade school and the high school. I can remember those ugly black long cotton stockings Mama made us wear, also woolen longies! Huron was the location of the State Fair every year and since we lived only 4 blocks from the railroad station, Mama decided here was a way to make some extra money. She told the boys if they would sell the popcorn, she would pop it for them. So she filled large baskets full of sacks of popcorn and the boys met each train as it came in and they sold every sack. When I was thirteen years old, one day my mother called me aside and told me there would be another baby in the house and she knew I would love it. Talk about using psychology! She really knew how, and didn't take instruction in it, either. However, I was at an age where I loved dolls and thought this would be like having another doll. So I started embroidering little dresses and flannel nightgowns for the new baby. Before the baby arrived on the 5th of December, 1909, Mama and Papa decided to buy a new home on the east side of Huron and they were so happy, for it was the first home they ever owned. They paid $2,000 for it and made payments every month. It was in a new neighborhood and Mr. Charlie Young was the contractor and builder and lived next door to us. When we moved there, again there was no sewage system, but no one cared; we had never enjoyed one so didn't know the difference. We lived there 2 months and my sister Helen was born, so now there were five children in the family. A few years passed and my youngest brother, Howard was born, and then our baby sister Marjorie, who was the last baby. Grandma and Grandpa Needham decided to move from Dumont, Iowa, and until they could finance a home, they lived with us. So our house was 'bulging at the seams' with eleven people in it, and Papa decided to build another bedroom onto the house, using the space on our huge back porch. This he did, working every night and weekends. Our lives were all more normal than they ever had been, skiing in the wintertime on that long hill which was one block east of 518 Simmons Ave., skating on the 'Jim' (James) River, skating north on the river and then holding our coats out so as to make wings and letting the strong winter winds blow us back to Huron, going fishing in the summertime with our mother [she made us put the worms on the hooks], and last but not least the wonderful times we had with our music. Vernon and Helen played their violins, Gerald played his mandolin, Gladys played the piano, and I had my marimbas. Howard and Marjorie were too young to take music lessons. Grandpa and Grandma finally located on Lawn Ridge Ave., just a block from us, and they were happy there. In 1914, World War 1 started and Vernon was called into the service. This was a sad time for our family. When it was night time and everything was quiet, we often heard taps being played out at the fair grounds, and we know this was a ill omen for one of our family would soon be in the war zone. However, Vernon was one of the fortunate ones and returned to the States unharmed. By this time conditions in our home were better because for in a few years intervening, electricity had been added, a sewer system had been added, a new bathroom was installed, and Mama descarded the old stick washing machine and now used an electric one. One very interesting thing happened when I was in High School. That wonderful Halleys Comet appeared every evening in the north eastern sky, and with that long tail of fire it presented a tremendous show. It lasted an hour until it disappeared in the west. Everybody thought the world was indeed coming to an end. Can you imagine all the Bandy kids sitting around the kitchen table and reading from the Bible about "Strange signs in the Sky"? When Mama and Papa were living in Dumont, they were baptized in the West Fork River, and were also converted. What a beautiful thought, we will see both of them some day "On the other shore". | |
Birth* | 19 Nov 1875 | Eldridge Wade Bandy was born on 19 Nov 1875 at Roanoke, VA. |
He was the son of Lewellen Allen Bandy and Mary Susan Doyle. | ||
Marriage* | 1896 | Eldridge Wade Bandy married Olivia Lura Needham, daughter of Melville Silas Needham and Helen Francina Overturf, in 1896. |
Death* | 8 Oct 1924 | Eldridge Wade Bandy died on 8 Oct 1924 at Huron, SD, at age 48. |
Family | Olivia Lura Needham b. 17 Feb 1879, d. 17 Mar 1967 | |
Children |
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Last Edited | 7 Sep 2016 |
Marie Josephine Knabe
#560, b. c 1876, d. c 1957
Father | Gustav Louis Adolph Oscar Knabe b. 3 Jun 1849 |
Mother | Auguste Louise Bergman b. 30 Jul 1848, d. a 1945 |
Person-Note* | AUNT MARIE by Donna O'Neill Aunt Marie was a professional seamstress. She worked as a live-in seamstress for wealthy families. Her work was impeccable. When there was material left over, and she got permission to do so, she would make outfits alike for my sisters and I. Dresses, sunsuits, and underwear. Of course, we handed down our clothes as we grew, so since there were 4 dresses alike, Helen Kay, as the youngest would end up wearing the same looking dress for years! (They never wore out). She spent many hours teaching me to knit and crotchet when I was about 10 and 11 years old. She would sit in a rocking chair and tell me stories of her youth in Germany. She had me sitting just behind her left shoulder, and she would knit or crochet verrry sloowley. She would never say, "Now you do this, or you do that", but would be telling me stories. Then when I got home, by magic there would be a crotchet hook and thread, and I would sit down and make the same doily I had watched her make that day. Aunt Marie went into what she called an "Old Folks" home in Phidelphia the last years of her life. It was the German Baptist Home for the Aged at 7023 Rising Sun Ave. in Phidelphia, PA. My sister and I visited the home just a few years ago, and the Director of the home remembered Aunt Marie. This director was a young volunteer at the time, and this was her first 'job'. She seemed very nice. Aunt Marie was a very special person in my young years. She was so very patient, and I spent many, many hours with her. Because I loved her so much, I promised her my first daughter would carry her name - and she does. It is Jenny Marie. | |
Birth* | c 1876 | Marie Josephine Knabe was born c 1876 at Brandenburg, Germany ?. |
She was the daughter of Gustav Louis Adolph Oscar Knabe and Auguste Louise Bergman. | ||
Death* | c 1957 | Marie Josephine Knabe died c 1957 at Philadelphia, PA. |
Last Edited | 7 Sep 2016 |
Orpha Luella Derr
#702, b. 10 Jun 1876
Charts | descendants of Richard (1722-1795) |
Marriage* | Orpha Luella Derr married Oakley Wanless Bandy, son of Lewellen Allen Bandy and Mary Susan Doyle. | |
Death* | Orpha Luella Derr died at Unknown. | |
Birth* | 10 Jun 1876 | She was born on 10 Jun 1876 at Yelverton, OH. |
Family | Oakley Wanless Bandy b. 23 May 1879, d. 14 Jan 1949 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 7 Sep 2016 |
Annie L. Doyle
#1378, b. 2 Sep 1876, d. 5 Aug 1969
Father | William Floyd Doyle b. 8 Aug 1852, d. 7 May 1934 |
Mother | Lucy Ann Sublett b. 1855 |
Burial* | Annie L. Doyle was buried; Sunset Cem, Christianburg, VA. | |
Birth* | 2 Sep 1876 | She was born on 2 Sep 1876 at Montgomery CO, VA. |
She was the daughter of William Floyd Doyle and Lucy Ann Sublett. | ||
Death* | 5 Aug 1969 | Annie L. Doyle died on 5 Aug 1969 at VA at age 92. |
Last Edited | 7 Sep 2016 |
Paris Wade Doyle
#1365, b. 1 Oct 1876
Father | Charles Wade Doyle b. 9 May 1856, d. 1928 |
Mother | Rhodie Jane Light b. 6 Jan 1856 |
Person-Note* | Marriage 1 Chloie Green LIGHT OR DEWEESE b: 7 Jan 1883 in Floyd, VA Married: 12 Nov 1905 in Salem, Roanoke Co, VA 6 7 8 Children 1. Alpha Jane DOYLE b: 24 Jul 1906 in Wabun, Roanoke Co, Va 2. Elmer Rex DOYLE b: 15 Dec 1907 in Wabun, Roanoke Co, VA 3. Elsie Mae DOYLE b: 11 May 1909 in Wabun, Roanoke Co, VA 4. Earl Hampton DOYLE b: 6 Dec 1911 in Roanoke Co, VA 5. Ollie Ruth DOYLE b: 14 Jul 1913 in Wabun, Roanoke Co, Va 6. Earnest Levi DOYLE b: 31 Jan 1915 in Wabun, Roanoke Co, VA 7. Mary Lorine DOYLE b: 7 May 1916 in Roanoke Co, VA 8. Margie Alice DOYLE b: 8 Jul 1917 in Wabun, Roanoke Co, VA 9. Ada Francis DOYLE b: 2 Jul 1920 in Wabun, Roanoke Co, VA 10. Grover Harrison DOYLE b: 20 Feb 1922 in Wabun, Roanoke Co, VA 11. Frank Edward DOYLE b: 18 Aug 1926 in Wabun, Roanoke Co, VA Marriage 2 Mary E. CLEMENT b: Jul 1877 in Franklin Co, VA Married: 25 Jul 1894 in Roanoke Co, VA 9 Children 1. Hayden DOYLE b: Apr 1895 in Cave Spring, Roanoke Co, VA 2. Clarence Wade DOYLE b: 26 Feb 1896 in Cave Spring, Roanoke Co, VA 3. Jessie James DOYLE b: Mar 1899 in Wabun, Roanoke Co, VA Sources: 1.Title: Roanoke Co, Virginia Marriage Records Note: Record show Paris' birth as Montgomery Co vs Floyd Co, Virginia. Record shows he was divorced prior to m. to Chloie. 2.Title: Email dated 4 Nov 1999 Author: Connie Mays 3.Title: IGI Author: See sources under Charles Wade Doyle Publication: All children info came fm Child #1 Call Number: 7204510 Sht 89 4.Title: Research Documents from Patricia Gale Doyle Note: Birth/Death Dates per Family info given to Barbara Doyle 5.Title: Marriage Record Note: Marriage record says Paris was a Sexton Laborer. 6.Title: Roanoke Co, Virginia Marriage Records Note: m. 12 Nov 1905 in Salem, VA by Rev. Aldine St. Clair. Both living in Roanoke Co when married. Record lists Paris' p. as C.W & R.J. and Cholie's parents as: Larkin and Mary J. 7.Title: IGI Call Number: 7601503 sht 51 8.Title: Census Note: RCVA, taken Apr 1930: Doyle, Paris W age 53 Laborer Elect. Railway Track, w/wife, Cora G age 46 (shud be Chloie G.); children: Elmer R age 22 Laborer Elect. Railway Track; Elsie M age 20; Earl H age 19 Laborer Elect. Railway Track; Ollie R age 16 Farmer, General Farming; Levi E age 15; Margie A age 12; Frances A age 9; Grover H age 8; Frank E age 3. 9.Title: Roanoke Co, Virginia Marriage Records Note: Husband Index. | |
Birth* | 1 Oct 1876 | Paris Wade Doyle was born on 1 Oct 1876 at Montgomery CO, VA. |
He was the son of Charles Wade Doyle and Rhodie Jane Light. |
Last Edited | 7 Sep 2016 |
Mary B. Woolwine
#1329, b. c 1877
Father | John Woolwine b. c 1853 |
Mother | Margaret Jennie Doyle b. 1851, d. a 1875 |
Birth* | c 1877 | Mary B. Woolwine was born c 1877 at Montgomery CO, VA. |
She was the daughter of John Woolwine and Margaret Jennie Doyle. |
Last Edited | 7 Sep 2016 |
John W. Bandy
#998, b. 1877
Father | (twin) Frank Pierce Bandy b. 1848 |
Mother | Virginia Atkinson |
Charts | descendants of Richard (1722-1795) |
Death* | John W. Bandy died at Unknown. | |
Birth* | 1877 | He was born in 1877 at VA. |
He was the son of (twin) Frank Pierce Bandy and Virginia Atkinson. |
Last Edited | 7 Sep 2016 |
James W. Bandy
#700, b. 4 Aug 1877, d. 1877
Father | Lewellen Allen Bandy b. 29 Apr 1856, d. Jan 1922 |
Mother | Mary Susan Doyle b. 4 Nov 1858, d. 5 Dec 1935 |
Charts | descendants of Richard (1722-1795) |
Death* | 1877 | James W. Bandy died in 1877 at Roanoke, VA. |
Birth* | 4 Aug 1877 | He was born on 4 Aug 1877 at Roanoke, VA. |
He was the son of Lewellen Allen Bandy and Mary Susan Doyle. |
Last Edited | 7 Sep 2016 |
Frank Beck
#1101, b. 26 Oct 1877, d. 1 Mar 1955
Father | Christian Beck b. 17 Aug 1844, d. 1931 |
Mother | Elizabeth Sellen b. 18 Dec 1852 |
Person-Note* | Frank had a tavern in Spokane, WA. | |
Birth* | 26 Oct 1877 | Frank Beck was born on 26 Oct 1877 at Burlington, Racine, WI. |
He was the son of Christian Beck and Elizabeth Sellen. | ||
Marriage* | 28 Jan 1903 | Frank Beck married Elizabeth Meier on 28 Jan 1903. |
Death* | 1 Mar 1955 | Frank Beck died on 1 Mar 1955 at age 77. |
Family | Elizabeth Meier b. 1882 |
Last Edited | 7 Sep 2016 |
Mary Johnson
#473, b. c 1878
Father | Charles W. Johnson b. 1849, d. 1877 |
Mother | Mary A. McCutcheon b. c 1859, d. 1935 |
Charts | descendants of James McCutcheon (1765-18510 |
Birth* | c 1878 | Mary Johnson was born c 1878 at Kern Co, CA. |
She was the daughter of Charles W. Johnson and Mary A. McCutcheon. |
Last Edited | 7 Sep 2016 |
Infant Doyle
#1366, b. 1878
Father | Charles Wade Doyle b. 9 May 1856, d. 1928 |
Mother | Rhodie Jane Light b. 6 Jan 1856 |
Person-Note* | Sources: 1.Title: Roanoke Co Census Note: 1900 Salem Dist: Hsld 160: Doyle, Charles W., b. May 1856, age 44, m.24 yrs, Farmer w/wife Rhoda, Apr 1853, age 45, 12 child, 11 living. One child is missing, may have been early death. All born in VA. | |
Birth* | 1878 | Infant Doyle was born in 1878 at Montgomery CO, VA. |
Infant Doyle was the child of Charles Wade Doyle and Rhodie Jane Light. |
Last Edited | 7 Sep 2016 |
Leila E. Doyle
#1379, b. 18 Apr 1878
Father | William Floyd Doyle b. 8 Aug 1852, d. 7 May 1934 |
Mother | Lucy Ann Sublett b. 1855 |
Birth* | 18 Apr 1878 | Leila E. Doyle was born on 18 Apr 1878 at Montgomery CO, VA. |
She was the daughter of William Floyd Doyle and Lucy Ann Sublett. |
Last Edited | 7 Sep 2016 |
Clarice Achsah Savage
#406, b. 19 May 1878
Father | Elmer L. Savage |
Mother | Estella Lois Needham b. 9 Nov 1851, d. 20 Mar 1935 |
Death* | Clarice Achsah Savage died at Unknown. | |
Birth* | 19 May 1878 | She was born on 19 May 1878. |
She was the daughter of Elmer L. Savage and Estella Lois Needham. |
Last Edited | 7 Sep 2016 |
Earl Wellington Needham
#376, b. 31 Oct 1878, d. 7 Jul 1905
Father | Leslie Benjamin Needham b. 21 Jul 1851, d. 6 Oct 1927 |
Mother | Phoebe Ellen Lawyer b. 15 Feb 1850, d. 15 Feb 1918 |
Birth* | 31 Oct 1878 | Earl Wellington Needham was born on 31 Oct 1878 at Franklin Co. IA. |
He was the son of Leslie Benjamin Needham and Phoebe Ellen Lawyer. | ||
Death* | 7 Jul 1905 | Earl Wellington Needham died on 7 Jul 1905 at Iowa Falls, IA, at age 26. |
Last Edited | 7 Sep 2016 |
Ada F. Woolwine
#1331, b. c 1879
Father | John Woolwine b. c 1853 |
Mother | Margaret Jennie Doyle b. 1851, d. a 1875 |
Birth* | c 1879 | Ada F. Woolwine was born c 1879 at Montgomery CO, VA. |
She was the daughter of John Woolwine and Margaret Jennie Doyle. |
Last Edited | 7 Sep 2016 |
Charles Bandy
#997, b. 1879
Father | (twin) Frank Pierce Bandy b. 1848 |
Mother | Virginia Atkinson |
Charts | descendants of Richard (1722-1795) |
Death* | Charles Bandy died at Unknown. | |
Birth* | 1879 | He was born in 1879 at VA. |
He was the son of (twin) Frank Pierce Bandy and Virginia Atkinson. |
Last Edited | 7 Sep 2016 |