My Family bullet Mabel WILSON


bulletMarhta Sue WILSON(1) (2) was born on 26 Jul 1937.


bullet Maria WILSON died on 15 Aug 1911. She was born 00 00 1827 in Lunenburg, N.S.. She was baptized 08 00 1843 in Tancook Baptist Church.

She was married to David STEVENS on 2 Dec 1847. Children were: Hannah STEVENS.


bullet Warren Sibley WILSON(1) (2) was born on 16 Feb 1918.


bullet John (Johnny) WINEGAR was born in 1829 in TN. He died in Oct 1909 in Hancock Co., TN.

Children were: Louis H. WINEGAR.


bulletLouis H. WINEGAR was born on 19 Apr 1868 in Hancock Co., TN. He died on 31 Jul 1943 in Hunt Co., TX. Parents: John (Johnny) WINEGAR and Louisa JOHNSON.

Children were: Sallie A. WINEGAR.


bulletSallie A. WINEGAR was born on 6 Aug 1900 in Hunt Co., TX. She died on 25 Aug 1979 in Greenville, Hunt Co., TX. Parents: Louis H. WINEGAR and Mattie West HORNE.

She was married to Joseph Emanuel LEATHERWOOD on 30 Aug 1923 in Greenville, Hunt Co., TX. Children were: Bobbie Louise LEATHERWOOD.


bullet Edward WINNING

He was married to Catherine GRANTHAM between 1715 and 1720. Children were: Mariah W. WINNING .


bullet Mariah W. WINNING Parents: Edward WINNING and Catherine GRANTHAM.

She was married to FLEET . Children were: Kate F. FLEET, Edward FLEET, Thomas FLEET, Winnie FLEET, David FLEET.


bullet Adlard WINSHIP

He was married to Alice FLEETE on 11 Jun 1627 in Holbeach Church.


bullet James WISCOMBE

He was married to Mary Ann FLEET on 12 Jun 1837 in Oving, Sussex, England.


bullet Mary Ann WITTERS

She was married to George Washington HOOVER. Children were: Ascecelia J. HOOVER.


bullet Duke Poland WLADISLAW I HERMAN was born in 1043. He died in 1102. Parents: Duke of Poland CASIMIR I.

He was married to Judith of BOHEMIA in 1080. Children were: Duke of Poland BOLESLAW III.


bullet Duke of Crocaw WLADISLAW II was born in 1105. He died in 1159. Parents: Duke of Poland BOLESLAW III and Zbslawa of KIEV .

He was married to Agnes of CRACOW in 1125. Children were: Rixa of POLAND.


bullet Abigail WOOD was born about 1690.

She was married to Parrot(t) FLEET in 1731. Children were: Simeon FLEET, Jeremiah FLEET, Deborah FLEET , Jesse FLEET, Sarah FLEET , Ann FLEET.


bullet Ina Myrtle WOOD was born in 1898. She died in 1953. She was buried in Rainey Cemetery near Toone, TN.


bulletIsrael WOOD was born about 1791 in Orange Co., NY. He was buried in Tyrone Cemetery, Tyrone, NY.

He was married to Anna FLEET.


bullet John WOOD was born in 1788. He died in 1853.

He was married to Deborah FLEET.


bullet Malinda Jane WOOD Parents: Zachariah WOOD and Ruth GADD.

She was married to Daniel WILLIAMS . Children were: Malvetus "Mallie" WILLIAMS .


bullet Margaret WOOD

She was married to Frederick William FLEET . Children were: George FLEET, Hazel FLEET.


bullet Susan WOOD

She was married to Ray Tom FLEET Jr. on 19 Dec 1992.


bullet Zachariah WOOD was born in 1800 in England.

He was married to Ruth GADD. Children were: Malinda Jane WOOD .


bullet Mary Carolyn WOODARD

Children were: William Floyd FLEET III, Catherine Elizabeth FLEET, Patricia Sue FLEET.


bulletJudith WOODEN was born on 12 Mar 1762. She died on 6 Jan 1847.

She was married to Arnold FLEET on 26 Jan 1780 in Oyster Bay, Nassau Co., NY. Married in New York by minister of St. George's Episcopal Church of Holy. Children were: Daniel FLEET, James FLEET, Deborah FLEET.


bullet Wade WOODLEY

He was married to Mary E. FLEET.


bullet John WOODWARD was born in 1799.

He was married to Caroline FLEET on 14 Jul 1823 in Churchill, Worchester, England.


bullet WOOLEY


bulletWilliam Greene WOOLVERTON was born about 1839 in Henderson Co., TN. He died before 1880.

He was married to Mary Adeline FLEET on 12 May 1867 in Hardeman Co., TN.


bullet King of Behemia WRATISLAW I died in 1174.

Children were: Judith of BOHEMIA.


bulletJohn F. WRIGHT.

He was married to Olga Denison FLEET on 28 Mar 1919.


bullet Jane WYATT was born in 1553. She died in 1617. She has reference number 4843. Parents: Thomas "The Younger" , Sir WYATT and Jane , Lady HAWTE (HAUTE).

Children were: Deborah SCOTT.


bulletThomas WYATT Sir. Of Allingston Castle.


bullet Thomas "The Elder" , Sir WYATT was born in 1503 in Allington Castle, Kent, England. He died on 11 Oct 1542 in Sherborne, Dorset. Burial: 11 Oct. 1542 in the great church of Sherborne. He has reference number 4837. WYATT, Sir Thomas (1503?-1542), poet, only son of Sir Henry Wyatt and Anne, daughter of John Skinner of Reigate, Surry, was born about 1503 at his father's residence, Allington Castle, Kent. The 'inquisition post mortem' of his father, dated 1537, inaccurately describes him as then aged 'twenty-eight years and upwards.'
At twelve years of age Thomas was admitted of St. John's College, Cambridge. He graduated there B.A. in 1518, and M.A. in 1520. There is a vague tradition that he also studied at Oxford. He married early----in 1520, when not more than 16----but as a boy he had made the acquaintance of Anne Boleyn, and long after the date of his marriage Wyatt was regarded as her lover. He soon sought official employment, and became esquire of the body to the king. In 1524 he was appointed clerk of the king's jewels, but the statement that he succeeded his father as treasurer to the king's chamber is an invention of
J.P.Collier, who forged entries in official papers in support of it (Trevelyan Papers, Camd. Soc.; SIMONDS, Sir Thomas Wyatt and his Poems). At Christmas 1525 he distinguished himself at a court tournament. Next year he accompanied Sir Thomas Cheney on a diplomatic mission to France.
In January 1526-7 he accompanied Sir John Russell, the ambassador, to the papal court. The story is told that Russell in his journey down the Thames encountered Wyatt, and, 'after salutations, was demanded of him whither he went, and had answer, "To Italy, sent by the king." "And I," said Wyatt, "will, if you please, ask leave, get money, and go with you." "No man more welcome," answered the ambassador. So, this accordingly done they passed in post together (Wyatt MSS.). While abroad at this time, Wyatt visited Venice, Ferrera, Bologna, Florence, and Rome. Russell broke his leg at Rome, and Wyatt
undertook to negotiate on his behalf with the Venetian republic. On his return journey towards Rome he was taken captive by the imperial forces under the constable Bourbon, and a ransom of three thousand ducats was demanded. Wyatt, however, escaped to Bologna.
On settling again in England Wyatt rejoined the court, but in 1529 and 1530 he chiefly spent his time at Calais, where he accepted the post of high-marshall. His relations with Anne Boleyn continued close until her favours were sought by Henry VIII. Then it is said that he frankly confessed to Henry the character of his intimacy with her (cf HARTSFIELD, Pretended Divorce), and warned him against marrying a woman of blemished character. In 1533 he was sworn of the privy council, and at Anne's coronation on White Sunday of that year he acted as chief 'ewerer' in place of his father, and poured scented water over the queen's hands. The story of the Spanish chronicler that Henry afterwards
banished Wyatt from court for two years in uncorroborated. In the spring of 1535 he was engaged in a heated controversy with Elizabeth Rede, abbess of West Malling, who declined to obey the orders of the government to admit Wyatt to confiscated property of the abbey. He was in attendance on the king early in 1536, but soon afterwards the discovery of Anne's post-nuptial infidelities created at court an atmosphere of suspicion, which threatened to overwhelm Wyatt. On 5 May 1536 he was committed to the Tower, but it was only intended to employ him as a witness against the queen. Cromwell wrote to Wyatt's father on 11 May that his life was to be spared. No legal proceedings were taken
against him, and he was released on 14 June. His sister Mary attended Queen Anne on the scaffold. A miniature manuscript book of prayers on vellum bound in gold (enamelled black), which now belongs to Lord Romney, is said to have been given by the queen to a lady of Wyatt's family. (A very similar volume and binding is among the Ashburpham MSS, at the British Museum; cf. Archaeologia, xliv. 259-70).
Wyatt made allusion to the fatal month of May in one of his sonnets; but he had not forfeited the king's favour, and the minister Cromwell thenceforth treated him with marked confidence. In October 1536 he was given a command against the rebels in Lincolnshire, and he was knighted on 18 March 1536-7. In 1537 he became sheriff of Kent. In April of the same year he was appointed ambassador to the emperor, in succession to Richard Pate, and he remained abroad, mostly in Spain, till April 1539. The negotiations in which he was engaged were aimed at securing friendly relations between the emperor and Henry VIII. The diplomacy proved intricate, and although Wyatt displayed in
its conduct sagacity and foresight, he achieved no substantial success. He found time in 1537 to send interesting letters of moral advice to his son (printed by Nott). In May 1538 Edmund Bonner [q.v.] and Simon Heynes [q.v.] were ordered under a special commission to Nice, where the emperor was staying, to join Wyatt in disuading him from taking part in a general counsel convened by the pope at Vicensa. Wyatt entertained Bonner and his companion at Villa Franca, where the English embassy had secured apartments remote from the heat and crowd of Nice; but Wyatt resented the presence of coadjutors and
treated them with apparent contempt. Bonner retaliated by writing to Cromwell (from Blois, 2 Sept. 1538) that Wyatt was engaged in traitorous correspondence with Reginald Pole, lived loosely, and used disrespectful language to the King (cf. Inner Temple Petyt MS. No. 47, f. 9; printed in Gent. Mag. 1850, i. 563-70). Cromwell, a staunch friend of Wyatt ignored the accusation, and on 27 Nov. 1538 wrote to him in terms of confidence. Wyatt was recalled to England in April 1539.
In the following December he was dispatched to Flanders to interview the emperor, who was on the point of paying a visit to the king of France in Paris. Thither Wyatt followed the emperor. In January 1540 Wyatt was especially requested to procure from the French court the arrest of a Welshman named Brancetor, an ally of Cardinal Pole, who had taken service in the household of the emperor, and was with him in Paris. Wyatt failed to secure the arrest of the man, who appealed to the emperor and to the French government for protection. Wyatt pressed the matter in an audence with the emperor, but he proved unconciliatory. Henry VIII on hearing from Wyatt of his difficulties instructed
him to remain firm. Wyatt followed the emperor to Brussells and boldly renewed his entreaties without result. Wyatt's inablity to improve the relations between Henry VIII and the emperor were in part responsible for Cromwell's fall. In 1540 he returned to the Low Countries.
After Cromwell's execution Bonner and Heynes renewed their old attack upon Wyatt. Their charges were now treated seriously, and Wyatt was sent to the Tower at the same time as another innocent ally of Cromwell, Sir John Wallop [q.v.]. Wyatt was privately informed of the accusation, and sent an elaborate paper of explanations, denying with much spirit that any treasonable intent could be deduced from any reports of his conversation (cf. Harl. MS. 78, arts. 6, 7; first printed by Horace Walpole in Miscellaneous Antiquities, 1772, ii. 21-54, from a transcript made by the poet Gray). But according to a letter sent by the lords of the council to Sir William Howard on 26 March 1541, Wyatt 'confessed upon his examination, all the things objected unto him, in a like
lamentable and pitifull sorte as Wallop did, whiche surely were grevous, delyvering his submission in writing, declaring thole history of his offences, but with a like protestation, that the same proceeded from him in his rage and folishe vaynglorios fantazie without spott of malice; yelding himself only to his majesties mercy, without whiche he sawe he might and must needes be justely condemned. And the contemplation of which submission, and at the greate and contynual sute of the Quenes Majestie, His Highnes, being of his owne most godly nature enclyned to pitie and mercy, hathe given him his pardon in as large and ample sorte as his grace gave thother to Sir John Wallop, whiche pardons be delyvered, and they sent for to come hither to Highnes at Dover'. Thenceforth the king's favour was secure. He had added the estate of Boxley to his large Kentish property, and now received grants of land at Lambeth and elsewhere, exchanging some of his land in Kent for other estates in Dorset and Somerset. He was made high steward of the manor of Maidstone, and early in 1542 he was sent to Falmouth to conduct the imperial ambassador to London. The heat of the weather and the fatigue of the journey brought on a violent fever, which compelled him to halt at Sherborne in Dorset. There Wyatt died, and on 11 Oct. 1542 he was buried in the great church of Sherborne. The register describes him as 'vir venerabilis.' The 'inquisitio post mortem,' dated 8 Jan. 1542-3, enumerates vast estates in Kent (34 Hen. VIII, Kent, m. 90).

He was married to Elizabeth , Lady BROOKE in 1520. Children were: Thomas "The Younger" , Sir WYATT.


bullet Thomas "The Younger" , Sir WYATT died on 11 Apr 1554 in London, England. He was born BET. 1520 - 1521. He has reference number 4836. WYATT, Sir Thomas the younger (1521?-1554), conspirator, was the eldest and only surviving son of Sir Thomas Wyatt the elder [q.v.], by his wife Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Brooke, third lord Cobham. He was brought up as a catholic. He is described as 'twenty-one years and upwards' in the 'inquisition post mortem' of his father, which was dated 8 Jan. 1542-43. The Duke of Norfolk was one of his godfathers. In boyhood he is said to have accompanied his father on an embassy to Spain, where the elder Sir Thomas Wyatt was threatened by the Inquisition. To this episode has been traced an irremovable detestation of the Spanish government, but the anecdote is probably apocryphal. All that is positively known of his relations with his father while the latter was in Spain is found in two letters which the elder Wyatt addressed from Spain to the younger, then fifteen years old. The letters give much sound moral advice. In 1537 young Wyatt married when barely sixteen. He succeeded on his father's death in 1542 to Allington Castle and Boxley Abbey in Kent, with much other property. Bu tthe estate was embarrassed, and he parted with some outlying lands on 30 Nov. 1543 to the king, receiving for them 3,669l. 8s. 2d. In 1542 he alienated, too, the estate of Tarrant in Dorset in favour of a natural son, Francis Wyatt, whose mother was Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Edward Darrel of Littlecote. Wyatt was of somewhat wild and impulsive temperament. At an early age he had made the acquaintance of his father's disciple, Henry Howard, earl of Surrey [q.v.], and during Lent 1543 he joined Surrey and other young men in breaking at night the windows of citizens houses and of London churches. They were arrested and brought before the privy council on 1 April, and they were charged not merely with acts of violence, but with having eaten meat during Lent. Surrey explained tht his efforts were directed to awakening the citizens of London to a sense of sin. Wyatt was inclined to deny the charges. He remained in the Tower till 3 May. In the autumn of 1543 Wyatt joined a regiment of volunteers which Surrey raised at his own expense to take part in the siege of Landrecies. Wyatt distinguished himself in the military operations, and was highly commended by Thomas Churchyard, who was present. (cf. CHURCHYARD, Pleasant Discourse of Court and of Wars, 1596). In 1544 Wyatt took part in the siege of Boulogne and was given responsible command next year. When Surrey became governor he joined the English council there (14 June 1545). Surrey, writing to Henry VIII, highly praised Wyatt's 'hardiness, painfulness, circumspection, and natural disposition to the war.) He seems to have remained abroad until the surrender of Boulogne in 1550. In November 1550 he was named a commissioner to delimit the English frontier in France, but owing to ill-health was unable to act. Subsequently he claimed to have served Queen Mary against the Duke of Northumberland when the duke attempted to secure the throne for his daughter-in-law, Lady Jane Grey. But he took no well defined part in public affairs at home until he learned of Queen Mary's resolve to marry Phillip of Spain. He regarded the step as an outrage on the nation's honour, but, according to his own account, never thought of publicly protesting against it until he received an invitation from Edward Courtenay [q.v.], earl of Devonshire, to join in a general insurrection throughout the country for the purpose of preventing the accomplishment of the queen's plan. He cheerfully undertook to raise Kent. Help was vaguely promised him by the French ambassador.
The official announcement of the marriage was published on 15 Jan. 1553-4. Seven days later Wyatt summoned his friends and neighbours to meet at Allington Castle to discuss means of resistance. He offered, if they would attempt an armed rebellion, to lead the insurgent force. Like endeavours made by Courtenay, the Earl of Suffolk, Sir James Crofts, and Sir Peter Carew, to excite rebellion in other counties failed [see CAREW, SIR PETER]. The instigators elsewhere were all arrested before they had time to mature their designs. Wyatt was thus forced into the position of chief actor in the attack on the government of the queen. He straightway published a proclamation at Maidstone which was addressed 'unto the commons' of Kent. He stated that his course had been approved by 'dyvers of the best of the shire.' Neighbours and friends were urged to secure the advancement of 'liberty and commonwealth,' which were imperilled by 'thequeen's determinate pleasure to marry with a stranger.'
Wyatt showed himself worthy of his responsibilities and laid his plans with boldness. Noailles, the French ambassador, wrote that he was 'estime par depa homme vaillant et de bonne conduicte;' and M. d'Oysel, the French ambassador in Scotland, who was at the time in London, informed the French king, his master, that Wyatt was 'ung gentil chevallier et fort estime parmy cest nation' (Ambassades de Noailles, iii, 15, 46). Fifteen hundred men were soon in arms under his command, while five thousand promised adherence later. He fixed his headquarters at the castle of Rochester. Some cannon and ammunition were secretely sent him up the Medway by agents in London; batteries were erected to command the passage of the bridge at Rochester and the opposite bank of the river.
When the news of Wyatt's action reached the queen and government in
London, a proclamation was issued offering pardon to such of his followers as should within twenty-four hours depart peaceably to their homes. Royal officers with their retainers were despatched to disperse small parties of Wyatt's associates while on their way to Rochester; Sir Robert Southwell broke up one band under an insurgent named Knevet; Lord Abergavenny defeated another reinforcement led by a friend of Wyatt named Isley; the citizens of Canterbury rejected Wyatt's entreaties to join him, and derided his threats. Wyatt maintained the spirit of his followers by announcing that he daily expected succour from France, and circulated false reports of successful risings in other parts of the country. Some of his followers sent to the council offers to return to their duty, and at the end of January Wyatt's fortunes looked desperate. But the tide turned for a season in his favour when the government ordered the Duke of Norfolk to march from London upon Wyatt's main body, with a detachment of white-coated guards under the command of Sir Henry Jerningham. The manoeuvre gave Wyatt an unexpected advantage. The duke was followed immediately by five hundred Londoners, hastily collected by one Captain Bret, and was afterwards joined by the sheriff of Kent, who had called out the trained
bands of the county. The force thus embodied by the government was inferior in number to Wyatt's, and it included many who were in sympathy with the rebels. As soon as they came within touch of Wyatt's forces at Rochester, the majority of them joined him, and the duke with his principal officers fled toward Gravesend.
Wyatt set out for London at the head of four thousand men. He found the road open. Through Dartford and Gravesend he marched to Blackheath, where he encamped on 29 Jan. 1553-4. The government acknowledged the seriousness of the situation, and sent Wyatt a message inviting him to formulate his demands, but this was only a means of gaining time. On 1 Feb. 1554 Mary proceeded to the Guildhall and addressed the citizens of London on the need of meeting the danger summarily. Wyatt was proclaimed a traitor. Next morning more than twenty thousand men enrolled their names for the protection of the city. Special precautions were taken for the security of the court and the Tower; many bridges over the Thames within a distance of fifteen miles were broken down; all peers in the neighbourhood of London received orders to raise their tenantry; and on 3 Feb. a reward of land of the annual value of one hundred pounds was offered the captor of Wyatt's person.
The same day Wyatt entered Southwark, but his followers were
alarmed by the reports of the government's activity. Many deserted, and Wyatt found himself compelled by the batteries on the Tower to evacuate Southwark. Turning to the south he directed his steps toward Kingston, where he arrived on 6 Feb. (Shrove Tuesday). The river was crossed without difficulty, and a plan was formed to surprise Ludgate. On the way Wyatt hoped to capture St. Jame's Palace, where Queen Mary had taken refuge. But his schemes were quickly betrayed to the government. A council of war decided to allow him to advance upon the city and then to press on him from every quarter. He proceeded on 7 Feb. through Kensington to Hyde Park, and had a sharp skirmish at Hyde Park Corner with a troop of infantry. Escaping with a diminished following, he made his way past St. Jame's Palace. Proceeding by Charing Cross along the Strand
and Fleet Street he reached Ludgate at two o'clock in the morning of 8 Feb. The gate was shut against him, and he was without the means or the spirit to carry it by assault. His numbers dwindled in the passage through London, and he retreated with very few followers to Temple Bar. There he was met by the Norroy herald, and recognising that his cause was lost, he made a voluntary submission. After being taken to Whitehall, he was committed to the Tower, where the lieutenant, Sir John Brydges (afterwards first Lord Chandos), received him with opprobrious reproaches. On his arrest the French ambassador, De Noailles, paid a tribute to his valour and confidence. He wrote of him as 'le plus vaillant et asseure de quoye jaye jamais ouy parler, qui a mis ladicte dame et seigneurs de son conseil en telle et si grande peur, qu'elle s'est veue par l'espace de huict jours en branale de sa couronne' (Ambassades de Noailles, iii, 59). On 15 March he was arraigned at Westminster of high treason, was condemned and sentenced to death (Fourth Rep. Deputy Keeper of Records, App, ii, pp. 244-5).
On the day appointed for his execution (11 April) Wyatt requested
Lord Chandos, the lieutenant of the Tower to permit him to speak to fellow- prisoner, Edward Courtenay, earl of Devonshire. According to Chando's report Wyatt on his knees begged Courtenay 'to confess the truth of himself.' The interview lasted half an hour. It does not appear that he said anything to implicate Princess Elizabeth, but he seems to have reproached Courtenay with being the instigator of his crime (cf. FOXE, Acts and Monuments, iii, 41, and TYTLER, Hist of Edward VI and Mary, ii, 320). Nevertheless, at the scaffold on Tower Hill he made a speech accepting full responsibility for his acts and exculpating alike Elizabeth and Courtenay (Chronicles of Queen Jane and Queen Mary, p 73; BATLEY, Hist. of the Tower, p. xlix). After he was beheaded, his body was subjected to all the barbarities that formed part of punishment for treason. Next day his head was hung to a gallows on 'Hay Hill beside Hyde Park,' and
subsequently his limbs were distributed among gibbets in various quarters of
the town (MACHIN, Diary, p 60). His head was stolen on 17 April.
Wyatt married in 1537 Jane, daughter of Sir William Hawte of Bishopsbourne, Kent. Through her he acquired the manor of Wavering. She bore him ten children of whom three married and left issue. Of these a daughter Anna married Roger Twysden, grandfather of Sir Roger Twysden [q.v.] , and another Charles Scott of Egerton, Kent, of the family of Scott of Scotshall. The son George was restored to his estate of Boxley, Kent by Queen Mary, and to that of Wavering by Queen Elizabeth in 1570. Parents: Thomas "The Elder" , Sir WYATT and Elizabeth , Lady BROOKE.

He was married to Jane , Lady HAWTE (HAUTE) in 1537. Children were: Jane WYATT.


bullet John YATES

He was married to Mary FLEET on 5 Oct 1855 in Dekalb Co., IL.


bullet Laurette YORK died in 1846.

She was married to Thomas BLACK on 23 Feb 1846.


bullet Mary YORK was born in 1820.


bulletYOUNG .

Children were: Dudley YOUNG, John YOUNG.


bulletAnna Catherine YOUNG was born on 5 Aug 1833. She was baptized on 20 Nov 1833 in Dutch Reformed Church, Lunenburg, NS. She died on 19 Apr 1918.

Children were: Louisa CROSS.


bulletDudley YOUNG. Parents: YOUNG and Alpha SHIRLEY.


bulletEdgar Vincent YOUNG was born on 25 Jan 1915. He died on 4 Jun 1993 in Montreal, PQ. Parents: Herbert H. YOUNG and Viola May YOUNG.

Children were: Rodney YOUNG .


bulletHerbert H. YOUNG was born on 15 Jan 1884. He was baptized on 31 Mar 1895 in Tancook Baptist Church by A.J.Marple. He died 0 ___ 1968.

He was married to Viola May YOUNG on 4 Feb 1907. Children were: Edgar Vincent YOUNG.


bullet John YOUNG Parents: YOUNG and Alpha SHIRLEY.


bullet Judith YOUNG

She was married to William FLEET in 1794.


bullet Mary Louisa YOUNG

She was married to Benjamin Reed FLEET . Children were: Charles Francis FLEET.


bullet Rodney YOUNG Parents: Edgar Vincent YOUNG and Mildred BAKER.


bullet Viola May YOUNG was born on 26 May 1888. She died 0 ___ 1935.

She was married to Herbert H. YOUNG on 4 Feb 1907. Children were: Edgar Vincent YOUNG.


bullet Rebecca YOUNGS was born in 1801. She died in 1873.

She was married to Daniel FLEET.


bullet Clark Dennis ZEAMAN was born on 23 Nov 1942.

He was married to Sandra Elizabeth FLEET on 29 Jan 1966 in Poughkeepsie, Dutchess Co., NY.


bullet Etta Margaret ZINCK was born on 7 Feb 1875. She died on 18 Apr 1948. Parents: Peter ZINCK and Sarah BARKHOUSE .

She was married to Warren Douglas PEARL on 29 Dec 1909. Children were: Georgina Louisa PEARL, Warren Vincent PEARL, Benjamin Borden PEARL, Sarah Edith PEARL.

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