Report: individuals with associated notes

         Description: personen met geassocieerde notities


Matches 1901 to 1950 of 2401  » Comma-delimited CSV file

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# Person ID Last Name First Name Birth Date Death Date Living note Tree
1901 I2153               
1902 I2155               
1903 I2150               
1904 I2156               
1905 I64  Quinney  Emma  15 Nov 1853  12 Aug 1937  Find A Grave Memorial# 137985190  bratt01 
1906 I2432               
1907 I2431               
1908 I2434               
1909 I2662  Randolph  Lady Agnes      [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Agnes, known as "Black Agnes," succeeded her two brothers (who died without
heirs) and assumed the title, Countess of Moray, in 1346. Her brother
Thomas, 2nd Earl, died in August, 1332, 23 days after his father; their
brother John, 3rd Earl, escaped to France after Halidon in July 1333, was
regent in 1335, married Lady Euphemia de Ross. 
bratt01 
1910 I2666  Randolph  Sir Thomas    28 Jul 1332  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Thomas was created Earl of Moray 1313-14. He was also Lord of Annandale
and of the Isle of Man, etc. Either his year of birth is wrong, or the dates
for his parents are wrong, or both. 
bratt01 
1911 I1644  Ranulf  II  855  5 Aug 890  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Ranulf II m. Irmgard (d. 935) and was Count 867-890 - "Ancestral Roots..."
(Balt., 1992) 144A-17. 
bratt01 
1912 I1276  Ranulph      [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Ranulph found at the Battle of Val-ed-Dunes in 1047. 
bratt01 
1913 I2675  Ranulph  Sir Thomas    Aft 1296  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Thomas was Chief of Clan Allan and served as Great Chamberlain of Scotland,
1273-96. {-see "Earls of Moray from 1313 to 1455" in "Family Records of
the Bruce and Cumyns...," M.E.Cummings Bruce (London: William Blackwood &
Sons, 1870), used at Bodleian Library, Oxford, England, 1987.} 
bratt01 
1914 I1391  Raoul        [dunbar_tree.FTW]

{"The Plantagenet Ancestry,"W.H.Turton (Balt.:Gen.Pub.Co.,1968),p.100 gives
Raoul's parents as Asperling de Vaudreuil and wife Sporta de Senlis;
Sporta also m. William Longsword, Duke of Normandy, cf. p.6. - see ID1804.} 
bratt01 
1915 I1555  Ratbold  II    948  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Arles is the name of a "kingdom" formed 933-35 uniting Provence and
Burgundy (including part of modern Switzerland). It appears that Ratbold
II had a son, Rudolph III, who bequeathed the kingdom to Emperor Conrad II
in 1032. It is unclear who the father of Boso, Count of Provence, is.
{Ratbold II is presumed to be the father of Gerberga, wife of Fulk II,
Count of Anjou - see W.H.Turton, "The Plantagenet Ancestry: (Baltimore:
Gen. Pub. Co., 1968, p.6), where the death year for Ratbold I is given as
928.} 
bratt01 
1916 I4965  Rathbun  Joshua  Abt 1806  2 Oct 1875  Albany city directory, 1869, p 153
https://books.google.com/books?id=VJFIAQAAMAAJ 
bratt01 
1917 I4965  Rathbun  Joshua  Abt 1806  2 Oct 1875  Gerrit T Bratt (I67) was a partner/worked for Joshua Rathbun & Co. Lumber. See Albany City Directory 1869 Albany city directory, 1869, p 153
https://books.google.com/books?id=VJFIAQAAMAAJ

Acors J Rathbone & Co h 58 North
Rathbun Fannie E Mrs house 197 Lumber
Rathbun Albert H clerk house 197 Lumber
Rathbun Joshua & Co Gerritt T Bratt Acors Rathbun lumber dealers 14 district winter office 443 Broadway 81 Columbia 
bratt01 
1918 I147  Ray  James  Apr 1873  1952  General nature of industry, business or establishment: Steam Railroad
Whether employer, employee, or working on own account: Wage earner 
bratt01 
1919 I5223  Ray  Keith C  25 Jan 1909  28 May 1973  Industry: Wholesale Bedding
Class of worker: Wage earner 
bratt01 
1920 I5223  Ray  Keith C  25 Jan 1909  28 May 1973  Industry: Gas Station
Class of worker: Wage or salary worker in private work 
bratt01 
1921 I13               
1922 I13               
1923 I13               
1924 I13               
1925 I146  Ray  Paul James  1 Feb 1900  3 Mar 1982  Lists Occupation as Stenographer for B R & P  bratt01 
1926 I146  Ray  Paul James  1 Feb 1900  3 Mar 1982  Industry: Oil Will Refinery
Class of worker: Wage earner 
bratt01 
1927 I146  Ray  Paul James  1 Feb 1900  3 Mar 1982  Industry: Oil Business
Class of worker: Wage or salary worker in private work 
bratt01 
1928 I146  Ray  Paul James  1 Feb 1900  3 Mar 1982  Branch Immaterial - Warrant Officers, USA,
Enlistment for the duration of the War or other emergency, plus six months, subject to the discretion of the President or otherwise according to law
Bookkeepers and cashiers, except bank cashiers
Single, without children
Height: 71 (In); Weight: 198
(Ancestry.com. U.S., World War II Army Enlistment Records, 1938-1946 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2005. ) 
bratt01 
1929 I146  Ray  Paul James  1 Feb 1900  3 Mar 1982  US Army  bratt01 
1930 I146  Ray  Paul James  1 Feb 1900  3 Mar 1982  Korean War, US Army  bratt01 
1931 I1728  Raymond    864  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Toulouse, in SW France, had a large population by the middle of the 4th century. In 419 is became capital of the Visigoth kingdom, and remained a great city under the Merovingians. Charlemagne appointed his little son Louis king of Aquitaine with
Toulouse the chief city. It was besieged by Charles the Bald in 844, and taken in 848 by the Norsemen. "About 852 Raymond I, count of Quercy, succeeded his brother Fridolo as count of Rouergue and Toulouse; it is from this noble that all the later
counts of Toulouse trace their descent." - Encycl.Brit.,'56,22:326. 
bratt01 
1932 I1550  Raymond  II      [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Raymond II was Margrave of Bothie, 919-23. He m. Godinhilda_______. 
bratt01 
1933 I1447  Raymond  III    950  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Encyclopedia Britannica (`56,22:326) reports "About 852 Raymond I, count
of Quercy, succeeded his brother Fridolo as Count of Rouergue and Toulouse;
it is from this noble that all the later counts of Toulouse trace their
descent. Dating from the 11th century the counts of Toulouse were the
greatest lords in southern France." 
bratt01 
1934 I1447  Raymond  III    950  also Count of Tolouse  bratt01 
1935 I2317               
1936 I1626  Regnier  850  916  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

First to bear title of Count of Hainaut ca. 875; controlled duchy of
Lorraine; married the great-granddaughter of Charlemagne. He became first
Duke of Lorraine in 911. He was lay abbot of Echternach (Luxembourg),
897-915. 
bratt01 
1937 I1435  Regnier  III  Abt 920  987  Possibly died in 973  bratt01 
1938 I1435  Regnier  III  Abt 920  987  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

"Ancestral Roots..." (Balt., 1992) 155-19 gives his year of death as 973. 
bratt01 
1939 I582  Reifschneider  John C.  9 Feb 1889  11 Jul 1975  US Army  bratt01 
1940 I582  Reifschneider  John C.  9 Feb 1889  11 Jul 1975  Bio from Findagrage.com: http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=119115376

From the Nevada State Journal, Sunday, May 4, 1975, page 7:

FROM GLASS BLOWER TO AUTO BODY REPAIR

Two Careers Enough For One Man? Now He'll Be An Author

Forty years is a long time to spend on one career. John C. "Jack" Reifschneider of Reno did just that with Jack's Auto Metal Body Shop in Reno. He opened it on North Virginia Street near the corner of 4th Street in 1929.

He retired in 1968 and his business was considered the longest lived of its kind in Reno. But Reifschneider, now 86, had an earlier career before getting into the auto reconstruction enterprise. He was a glass blower.

Reifschneider was a lad of 20 when he arrived in Beausejour, Manitoba, Canada, on a winter day in February and the temperature reading 47 degrees below zero. He spent three working seasons at the Manitoba Glass Factory.

"I was asked if I wanted to be a mold boy," Reifschneider wrote in a rough draft of a proposed book he plans on the art and history of glass blowing. He is being helped by his wife of 55 years, Olga.

"The superintendent soon learned he was talking to a union glass blower," Reifschneider continued. He said he was probably the youngest journeyman at the time.

Although having worked as a mold boy for four years, Reifschneider only served four months of a five-year apprenticeship before receiving his union card.

He'd signed as an apprentice with the American Bottle Company in his home town of Belleville, Illinois, in March of 1908, but in June of that year the company closed.

"The officials released me and a friend and gave us journeymen cards with the Green Bottle Blowers Association for $25 each," he wrote, adding, "It was up to us to prove our skill in the trade."

After working for the Illinois Glass Company in Alton, Illinois, he went to the Sydenham Glass Company, Limited, in Wallaceburg, Ontario, and then on to Beausejour in 1909 until the end of the season in June.

He said it was the custom for glass factories to close during July and August in order to make necessary repairs and changes in the tank furnaces and factories.

Upon his arrival at Beausejour, Reifschneider was told the original glass factory was operated by Polish glass blowers who used pots for mixing glass and the European method to make the free blown containers.

It wasn't long until the factory was rebuilt to cater to the American method, and American glass blowers took jobs. Reifschneider recalled the types of containers made in the Manitoba Glass Factory as being amber and green beer and soda bottles.

After he left in December of 1911, the factory was changed over to semi-automation in early 1912. The factory then produced clear flint bottles shaped like ten pins for a beverage firm, lids for Ball Brothers, clear medicine bottles and ink bottles.

In the several times the Reifschneiders have visited Beausejour since an initial journey in 1954, they have obtained from friends there several of the beer bottles made then. They include an amber bottle McDonagh & Shea, Winnipeg; green bottle E. L. Drury, Winnipeg and green bottle Pelissier and Sons, Winnipeg.

Reifschneider said the American method of glass blowing required a tank furnace constructed of fire-clay brick and fire clay, which could operate continuously for 10 months of the year, providing glass blowers, working in teams called "shops" with good quality working glass full time.

The tank furnace in the Manitoba factory was built semi-circular of fire-clay brick imported from St Louis, Missouri. A bridge of fire clay was built lengthwise in the center of the tank, in the lower center of which was an opening or throat.

The batch of raw material including mullet (scrap glass) was fed into the rear of the tank, the melted glass flowed through the throat into the front to form a pool of molten glass.

The semi-circular side in front had openings called glory holes, from which the glass blowers gathered the glass on pipes.

Efficient operation of the furnace required glass in weight (tonnage), removed by the glass blowers, be balanced with the amount in weight of batch fed into the rear of the furnace.

Tamarack wood was burned through a flue to make the gas from which flames played around and over the open furnace. Crude oil heated the double glory hole unit which was separate and used in the final operation of making bottles.

Each shop was a working unit of men and boys, working on two levels or benches with three journeymen glass blowers, one mold-boy, one glory hole boy, and one carrying in boy.

The glass blower heated the end of the blow pipe cherry red, gathered a small amount of glass on it, rolled it on the stone on the upper level, blew into the pipe to form a stem, dipped it into water to cool slightly, gathered more glass and blew again, working it on the stone.

It was then placed in a singed, two-way, air-cooled mold, which was clamped by the mold-boy on the lower level. The glass blower blew again to form the bottle to shape. The mold boy took it out of the mold and set it on a table.

The glory hole boy placed it in a clamp the size of the bottle, ground off the rough glass on the neck, and placed the bottle in the double glory hole to heat the neck cherry red.

It went to the gaffer sitting on a bench. He had a tool to finish the neck, using a mix of charcoal and powered resin. the glory-hole boy put the bottle on a paddle and carried it to a conveyor belt in the annealing oven (lehr), which was kept at 1,300 degrees.

If the heat was too hot, the bottles stuck together and were ruined. If the oven was too cold, the annealing process failed. That was how the bottles were made, according to Reifschneider.

While he has had two different careers, he also has had a lifetime hobby - photography. Reifschneider has his own pictures to peruse to remember the good old days of glass blowing, and to use in his book.

Burial:
Masonic Memorial Gardens
Reno
Washoe County
Nevada, USA
Plot: West Mausoleum (East Entrance) 
bratt01 
1941 I20               
1942 I2862  Renison  Pelleg Lea  12 Aug 1880  8 Mar 1959  Industry: Shop
Class of worker: Wage earner 
bratt01 
1943 I2862  Renison  Pelleg Lea  12 Aug 1880  8 Mar 1959  Industry, business or establishment: Railroad
Employer, salary or wage worker, or working on own account: Wage earner 
bratt01 
1944 I2862  Renison  Pelleg Lea  12 Aug 1880  8 Mar 1959  Whether employer, employee, or working on own account: Wage earner  bratt01 
1945 I4650  Renison  Preston Lee  17 Jun 1918  2 Jul 1999  Name recorded as Weston in 1920 Census.  bratt01 
1946 I4650  Renison  Preston Lee  17 Jun 1918  2 Jul 1999  CPT US ARMY AIR FORCES WORLD WAR II  bratt01 
1947 I4650  Renison  Preston Lee  17 Jun 1918  2 Jul 1999  Section 50 Site 5473  bratt01 
1948 I18  Renison  Ralph Leonard  15 Feb 1906  5 Apr 1976  Industry: Cafe
Class of worker: Wage earner 
bratt01 
1949 I18  Renison  Ralph Leonard  15 Feb 1906  5 Apr 1976  Industry: Lumber Co
Class of worker: Wage or salary worker in Gov't work 
bratt01 
1950 I18  Renison  Ralph Leonard  15 Feb 1906  5 Apr 1976  https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/17806150/ralph-l.-renison  bratt01 


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