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| Husband: William Melvin Grimes | |||
| Born: | 7 Aug 1868[7045] [7046] [7047] [7048] [7049] | at: | Marshall County, Illinois, USA |
| Married: | 14 Feb 1900 | at: | Bloomington, Mclean County, Illinois, USA |
| Died: | 7 May 1920[7050] [7051] | at: | Chenoa, McLean County, Illinois, USA |
| Father: | Aaron Grimes | ||
| Mother: | Angeline Hawes | ||
| Notes: | [7056] | ||
| Sources: | [7054] [7055] [7045] [7046] [7047] [7048] [7049] [7050] [7051] [7052] [7053] [7057] [7058] [7059] [7060] | ||
| Wife: Frances Folsom Beasley | |||
| Born: | 29 Sep 1886[6755] [6756] [6757] [6758] [6759] [6761] [6762] | at: | Lexington, McLean County, Illinois, USA |
| Died: | 12 Feb 1979[6764] | at: | Macon, Macon County, Illinois, USA |
| Father: | Luther Sanford Beasley | ||
| Mother: | Ruth Matella Claggett | ||
| Notes: | [6767] | ||
| Sources: | [6755] [6756] [6757] [6758] [6759] [6761] [6762] [6764] [6765] [6766] [6768] [6769] | ||
| Children | |||
| Name: | William Louise Grimes Jr. [541] [539] [540] [542] | ||
| Born: | 7 Aug 1909[539] | at: | |
| Married: | at: | ||
| Died: | 9 Nov 1995[540] | at: | Batavia, Kane, Illinois |
| Spouses: | Edith Louise McKee | ||
| Name: | Madge Metella Grimes [1135] [1132] [1127] [1128] [1129] [1130] [1131] [1133] [1134] [1136] [1137] [1138] [1139] [1140] [1141] | ||
| Born: | 25 Jun 1913[1127] [1128] [1129] [1130] | at: | Lexington, McLean County, Illinois, USA |
| Married: | at: | ||
| Died: | 12 Nov 1999[1131] | at: | Greenfield, Hancock County, Indiana, USA |
| Spouses: | McClernand Butler | ||
/--
/--
| \--
/--Aaron Grimes
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--William Melvin Grimes
| /--
| /--Cap Hawes
| | \--
\--Angeline Hawes
| /--
\--
\--
/--
/--Thomas Wesley Beasley
| \--
/--Luther Sanford Beasley
| | /--Samuel Claggett III
| \--Ann Elizabeth Claggett
| \--Julia Frances Sanford
|--Frances Folsom Beasley
| /--Samuel Claggett III
| /--James Augustine Claggett
| | \--Lucy Sanford
\--Ruth Matella Claggett
| /--Samuel Claggett III
\--Catherine Johnson
\--Catherine Norris
[7056] May have been born in Magnolia, IL. Birthdate could be July 15, 1866.Birth place could be Odell, Livingston County, Illinois. May have grownup in Odell, IL. May have died on April 30, 1920. Informant onWilliam's death cert. is a Betram Grimes (maybe a brother) may have livedin Aberdeen.
Searched WFT vols. 1-12, no hits. Searched Pres & F&P, no hits.
[6767] ~Searched WFT vols. 1-12, no hits. Searched CAG no hits. Searched Pres &F&P no hits.
[541] Based on notes compiled by Ruth Matella Beasley.
~ SSN 352-05-2175
[1135] Searched WFT vols. 1-57, no hits. Searched Pres & F&P, no hits.
Obituary Notice for Madge Butler
Life long Ottawa resident Madge Metella (Grimes) Butler passed away onFriday, November 12th, at 10:16 am, in Greenfield, Indiana due to cancer.
Mrs. Butler was born 6-25-1913 in Lexington, IL to William L. Grimes andFrances (Beasly) Grimes. She was married on 1-23-1937 in Wilmette, IL toCol. McClernand Butler. The Butlers moved their family from Springfield,IL to Ottawa in 1947. Mrs. Butler was a schoolteacher for over 50 years,and was retired from the Ottawa Public School System. She taught 1st,2nd, and 4th grades in Hills, Washington, Lincoln, Columbus and Shabbonagrade schools.
Mrs. Butler was also a long time member of The Camp Fire Girls and was aprincipal negotiator in acquiring land for the girls camp. Mrs. Butlergraduated from Normal Teachers College (now Illinois State University) on11-20-1936, where she was captain of the debate team.
The Butlers were former members of the Presbyterian and CongregationalChurches, but have been attending the Illinois Valley Evangelical Churchfor the past several years.
The Butlers had just moved away from Ottawa to Greenfield, Indiana inorder to be closer to family. Mrs. Butler leaves her husband McClernandButler of Ottawa, daughter Susan Elizabeth (Butler) Crawford ofGreenfield, IN, grandson McClernand Butler Crawford of New Palestine, INand great-grandson Graham Butler Crawford of New Palestine, IN. MadgeButler was a very valuable piece to Ottawa's community and history; she will be sorely missed.
Memorial services will be held on Saturday, November 20 at 2pm, at theIllinois Valley Evangelical Church, in Ottawa. Gravesite services will be held at Oak Ridge Cemetery in Springfield, IL in the spring.
Flowers for the memorial service can be sent to: Illinois Valley Evangelical Church, 215 W. Washington St, Ottawa, IL 61350
Madge was the granddaughter of Aaron Grimes, Private, Co. B 77th Inf.IL, Union Army and great-grand neice of Thomas Johnson Claggett, member of John Mosby's Rangers, Virginia CSA.
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| Husband: George McRae | |||
| Born: | 30 Jul 1883 | at: | Battle Creek, California, USAlhoun, Michigan, u.S. |
| Married: | 16 Nov 1909 | at: | |
| Died: | 7 Jan 1969 | at: | Muskegon, Michigan, United States |
| Father: | Christopher McRae | ||
| Mother: | Wife: (--?--) | ||
| Children | |||
/--Christopher MacRae
/--Alexander McRae
| \--Selenda Phelps
/--Christopher McRae
| | /--
| \--Caroline Harriet Rogers
| \--
|--George McRae
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--
| /--
\--
\--
| Husband: Jedediah Phelps | |||
| Born: | 12 May 1756 | at: | Simsbury, Hartford, Connecticut, United States |
| Married: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Father: | John Phelps | ||
| Mother: | Thanks Wilcox | ||
| Wife: Lydia Gaylord | |||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Father: | |||
| Mother: | |||
| Children | |||
/--Joseph Phelps
/--Amos Phelps
| \--Mary Case
/--John Phelps
| | /--John Pettibone
| \--Sarah Pettibone
| \--Mary Bissell
|--Jedediah Phelps
| /--William Willcockson
| /--William (Deac) Wilcox
| | \--Elizabeth or Isabel Wilson
\--Thanks Wilcox
| /--William Willcockson
\--Thankful Adams
\--Thankful Shepard
/--
/--
| \--
/--
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Lydia Gaylord
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--
| /--
\--
\--
| Husband: McClernand Butler | |||
| Born: | 10 Jul 1910[11147] [11148] [11149] [11150] [11151] [11152] [11153] [11154] [11155] | at: | Springfield, Sangamon, Illinois, United States |
| Married: | 23 Jan 1937 | at: | Wilmette, Cook County, Illinois, USA |
| Died: | 14 Oct 2001 | at: | Greenfield, Hancock County, Indiana, USA |
| Father: | William Joseph Butler | ||
| Mother: | Bessie Gross | ||
| Notes: | [11156] | ||
| Sources: | [11147] [11148] [11149] [11150] [11151] [11152] [11153] [11154] [11155] [11157] [11158] [11159] [11160] [11161] [11162] [11163] [11164] [11165] [11166] [11167] [11168] [11169] [11170] | ||
| Wife: Madge Metella Grimes | |||
| Born: | 25 Jun 1913[1127] [1128] [1129] [1130] | at: | Lexington, McLean County, Illinois, USA |
| Died: | 12 Nov 1999[1131] | at: | Greenfield, Hancock County, Indiana, USA |
| Father: | William Melvin Grimes | ||
| Mother: | Frances Folsom Beasley | ||
| Notes: | [1135] | ||
| Sources: | [1132] [1127] [1128] [1129] [1130] [1131] [1133] [1134] [1136] [1137] [1138] [1139] [1140] [1141] | ||
| Children | |||
| Name: | Susan Elizabeth Butler [928] | ||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Married: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | |||
/--William 'Bill' Butler
/--Henry Wirt Butler
| \--Elizabeth Rickard
/--William Joseph Butler
| | /--John 'Mac' Alexander McClernand
| \--Helen Chase McClernand
| \--Sarah Freeman Dunlap
|--McClernand Butler
| /--Alba Gross Rev.
| /--Eugene L. Gross
| | \--Alethea Smith
\--Bessie Gross
| /--Alba Gross Rev.
\--Susan Louise Zimmerman
\--Susan Philenia Seely
/--
/--Aaron Grimes
| \--
/--William Melvin Grimes
| | /--Cap Hawes
| \--Angeline Hawes
| \--
|--Madge Metella Grimes
| /--Thomas Wesley Beasley
| /--Luther Sanford Beasley
| | \--Ann Elizabeth Claggett
\--Frances Folsom Beasley
| /--Thomas Wesley Beasley
\--Ruth Matella Claggett
\--Catherine Johnson
[14287]
Mac & Madge were forced to be married twice. In the late 1930'steachers who were women could lose thier jobs if they were married.Being very much in love Mac & Madge found themselves in a difficultdilemma. Unlike the 1990's, living together and premarital sex were outof the question. At the same time Madge was under contract with the CookCounty School District and could not get out of her obligations until theend of the next school year.
The first ceremony was secretly held at the home John & Betty (Mac'sSister) McHenry. Only thier parents and a few close friends attended.For next year they had to hide thier marriage. Almost a year pastedbefore Madge was able to quit her job. The second ceremony was held inSpringfield Illinois and was very big affair.
[11156] Commanding Officer of the 3rd Battalion, 99th Infantry Division during the Battle of the Bulge, World War II
Lieutenant Colonel McClernand Butler took command of the 3rd Battalion on February 1, 1944. On September 15, 1944, the division embarked for England, and on October 31, 1944, it sailed on HMS Empire Lance for Le Havre, France.
The 3rd Battalion became the first unit of the 99th Division to reach the front when it moved to Hofen, Germany, on November 9, 1944. Hofen was part of Germany's Siegfried Line, or West Wall. The battalion held a 6,000-yard front from Monschau to Hofen toward Alzen. The 38th Cavalry Squadron stood on its left flank, and the other two battalions of the 395th Infantry held the right flank.
On December 16, 1944, a tremendous artillery barrage signaled the start of Adolf Hitler's final offensive. The German plan was to attack west to the Meuse River and north through Liége and on to the English Channel, splitting the Allies' forces.
At Hofen, the 3rd Battalion fought off fierce attacks by the 751st and 753rd Volksgrenadier regiments. The first day of fighting saw 19 Germans captured and an estimated 200 killed. The battalion lost four dead, four missing and seven wounded. As the Battle of the Bulge continued, the Germans renewed their efforts to crack Hofen. Several times, Butler had to call in artillery fire on his own positions to drive the enemy back.
In another day's fighting the 3rd Battalion took 50 Germans prisoner and caused more than 800 German casualties, losing five dead and seven wounded in the action. On December 23, the weather cleared and Allied planes took to the skies to bomb German columns, shattering their final offensive.
The 3rd Battalion's tenacious fight for Hofen was recognized on March 7 at Gohr, when the unit was decorated with the Presidential Unit Citation.
The battalion saw action thereafter at Bergheim, Remagen, the Ruhr Pocket and Gleidorf.
Later, the battalion moved southeast to join the Third Army, commanded by General George S. Patton, in mopping up German resistance. May 2 brought an end to the fighting and an end to nearly six months of brutal combat for the men of the 3rd Battalion.
From an interview with Col. Butler.
Mac helped write a book about his battalion, "Butler's Battlin' Blue Bastards," by Thor Ronningen. 1993 Brunswick Publicshing Corpo, Rt 1. Box 1A1, Lawrencevile, Virginia 23968
Veteran Col. McClernand Butler passed away on October 14th, 2001 at 6:35 p.m. due to natural causes.
Col. Butler was born July 10, 1910 in Springfield, IL to William J. Butler and Bessie (Cross) Butler.
Butler entered the Illinois National Guard in 1926 and attended West Point Military Academy from 1930-1933. While at West Point he set records for marksmanship which are still unbroken. In 1933, he was commissioned a 2nd Lieutenant in the Illinois National Guard. Butler entered Federal service on March 5th, 1941 as a 2nd Lieutenant, and in 1944 was promoted to Lt. Colonel. Upon his retirement from military service in 1960, Butler was promoted to full Colonel.
During WWII he served with distinction on the front lines of the European Theater. Butler was commander of the 3rd Battalion, 395th Infantry Regiment. On May 22, 1943 he was appointed Regimental Executive Officer of the 393rd Infantry Regiment and on July 17th, 1945 he was appointed Regimental commander of the 394th Infantry Regiment where he remained until the regiment was returned to the United States. Butler was discharged from the service on January 14th, 1945.
Once back in Illinois, Butler helped to form the 123rd Infantry Regiment Illinois National Guard, 44th Infantry Division. This division was mobilized in 1952 because of the war in Korea and Butler received his orders for the Far East. He was originally assigned as a Battalion Commander in the 7th Infantry Division and later was assigne3d to the division staff.
A Silver Star, Purple Heart and four Bronze Stars were among the many decorations Col.. Butler received while in the service. However it was the Presidential Unit Citation that his unit received for their actions during the Battle of the Bulge of which Butler was most proud.
He was married on January 23, 1937 to Madge Grimes of Lexington, IL. The Butlers moved their family from Springfield, IL to Ottawa in 1947, Col. Butler was the Ottawa and LaSalle branch manager for the Illinois Bell Telephone Company.
Colonel Butler was the Past President of the Ottawa Chamber of Commerce and Past President of the Ottawa Rotary Club where he held membership for over 35 years. He also held membership in the Elks Club, Dede-Co Golf Club, American Legion, VFW, Veterans of the Battle of the Bulge, The Sons of the Union Veterans of the Civil War, Order of the Indian Wars of the Untied States and was a Scoutmaster for the Boy Scouts of America.
The Butlers were former members of the Presbyterian and Congregational Churches, but had been attending the Illinois Valley Evangelical Free Church in Ottawa for the past several years.
As a resident of Greenfield, Colonel Butler lived at Green Tree Assisted Living Community and continued his membership at the Rotary Club of Greenfield.
Colonel Butler is preceded in death by his wife Madge (Grimes) Butler of Ottawa, his brother Wirt Butler of Wheaton, IL and his sisters Louise (Butler) Flake of Rockville, MD, and Elizabeth (Butler) Mchenry of Albuquerque, NM.
Colonel Butler is survived by his daughter Susan Elizabeth (Butler) Crawford of Greenfield, IN, son in law David Bialy Crawford of Greenfield, IN, grandson McClernand Butler Crawford of New Palestine, IN, granddaughter-in-law Stephanie Ann (Graham) Crawford of New Palestine, IN and great-grandchildren Graham Butler Crawford and Elizabeth Chase Crawford of New Palestine, IN.
McClernand Butler will be remembered as a war hero, community leader, loving family man, and a good neighbor. He will be sorely missed.
Visitation will be held at Erlewein Mortuary in Greenfield, IN Thursday, October 18th, 4 p.m. - 8 p.m.
Memorials may be made to The National WWII Memorial in Washington D.C.
Source: Miscellaneous Hancock County, Indiana Obituaries
https://www.obitcentral.com/obitsearch/obits/in/in-hancock5.htm
(Searched WFT vols. 1-57, no hits. Searched Pres & F&P no hits.)
[1135] Searched WFT vols. 1-57, no hits. Searched Pres & F&P, no hits.
Obituary Notice for Madge Butler
Life long Ottawa resident Madge Metella (Grimes) Butler passed away onFriday, November 12th, at 10:16 am, in Greenfield, Indiana due to cancer.
Mrs. Butler was born 6-25-1913 in Lexington, IL to William L. Grimes andFrances (Beasly) Grimes. She was married on 1-23-1937 in Wilmette, IL toCol. McClernand Butler. The Butlers moved their family from Springfield,IL to Ottawa in 1947. Mrs. Butler was a schoolteacher for over 50 years,and was retired from the Ottawa Public School System. She taught 1st,2nd, and 4th grades in Hills, Washington, Lincoln, Columbus and Shabbonagrade schools.
Mrs. Butler was also a long time member of The Camp Fire Girls and was aprincipal negotiator in acquiring land for the girls camp. Mrs. Butlergraduated from Normal Teachers College (now Illinois State University) on11-20-1936, where she was captain of the debate team.
The Butlers were former members of the Presbyterian and CongregationalChurches, but have been attending the Illinois Valley Evangelical Churchfor the past several years.
The Butlers had just moved away from Ottawa to Greenfield, Indiana inorder to be closer to family. Mrs. Butler leaves her husband McClernandButler of Ottawa, daughter Susan Elizabeth (Butler) Crawford ofGreenfield, IN, grandson McClernand Butler Crawford of New Palestine, INand great-grandson Graham Butler Crawford of New Palestine, IN. MadgeButler was a very valuable piece to Ottawa's community and history; shewill be sorely missed.
Memorial services will be held on Saturday, November 20 at 2pm, at theIllinois Valley Evangelical Church, in Ottawa. Gravesite services willbe held at Oak Ridge Cemetery in Springfield, IL in the spring.
Flowers for the memorial service can be sent to: Illinois ValleyEvangelical Church, 215 W. Washington St, Ottawa, IL 61350
Madge was the granddaughter of Aaron Grimes, Private, Co. B 77th Inf.IL, Union Army and great-granddaughter of Thomas Beasley.
[928] This person is presumed living.
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| Husband: Edward 'Longshanks' Plantagenet I King of England | |||
| Born: | 17 Jun 1239 | at: | Westminster, Middlesex, England |
| Married: | 18 Oct 1254 | at: | Las Huelgas, Burgos, Spain |
| Died: | 7 Jul 1307 | at: | Burgh on Sands, Cumberland, England |
| Father: | Henry Plantagenet III King of England | ||
| Mother: | Eleonore Countess of Provence Queen of England | ||
| Notes: | [2503] | ||
| Sources: | [2504] | ||
| Wife: Eleanor of Castile Countess of Ponthieu | |||
| Born: | ABT 1244 | at: | Castile, Spain |
| Died: | 24 Nov 1290 | at: | Herdeby, Near Grantham, Lincolnshire, England |
| Father: | Fernando III 'The Saint' Alfonsez King of Castile and Leon | ||
| Mother: | Jeanne de Dammartin Countess of Aumale | ||
| Notes: | [3103] | ||
| Sources: | [3104] | ||
| Children | |||
| Name: | Eleanor Plantagenet [3105] | ||
| Born: | 17 Jun 1264 | at: | Windsor Castle, Berkshire, England |
| Died: | 12 Oct 1297 | at: | Gent, F-Occd, Belgium |
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | John Plantagenet [3106] | ||
| Born: | 10 Jul 1266 | at: | Windsor, Berkshire, England |
| Died: | 3 Aug 1271 | at: | Westminster, London, England |
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Henry Plantagenet [3107] | ||
| Born: | 13 Jul 1267 | at: | Windsor, Berkshire, England |
| Died: | 14 Oct 1274 | at: | Merton, Surrey |
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Juliana Plantagenet [2652] | ||
| Born: | 1271 | at: | Akko, Hazafon, Israel |
| Died: | 1271 | at: | Akko, Hazafon, Israel |
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Joan of Acre [2649] | ||
| Born: | 1272 | at: | Acre, Alaskako, Hazafon, Israel |
| Married: | at: | ||
| Died: | 23 Apr 1307 | at: | Clare, Suffolk, England |
| Spouses: | Gilbert 'The Red Earl' de Clare Earl of Gloucester | ||
| Name: | Alphonso Plantagenet Earl of Chester [2653] | ||
| Born: | 24 Nov 1273 | at: | Bayonne, Basses-Pyrenees, France |
| Died: | 19 Aug 1284 | at: | |
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Isabel Plantagenet [2648] | ||
| Born: | ABT 1274 | at: | Windsor Castle, Berkshire, England |
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Margaret Plantagenet [2654] | ||
| Born: | 11 Sep 1275 | at: | Windsor Castle, Windsor, Berkshire, England |
| Died: | 1318 | at: | Brussels, Belgium |
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Berengaria Plantagenet [2655] | ||
| Born: | 1276 | at: | Kennington, Berkshire, England |
| Died: | ABT 1277 | at: | |
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Mary Plantagenet [2656] | ||
| Born: | 11 Mar 1278 | at: | Windsor Castle, Windsor, Berkshire, England |
| Died: | BEF 8 Jul 1332 | at: | Amesbury |
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Alice Plantagenet [2657] | ||
| Born: | 12 Mar 1279 | at: | Palace, Woodstock, Oxfordshire, England |
| Died: | 1291 | at: | |
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Elizabeth Plantagenet [2658] [2659] | ||
| Born: | 7 Aug 1282 | at: | Rhuddlan Castle, Flintshire, Wales |
| Married: | at: | ||
| Died: | 5 May 1316 | at: | Quendon, Essex, England |
| Spouses: | John I Count of Holland , Humphrey de Bohun | ||
| Name: | Edward Plantagenet II King of England [2622] [2623] | ||
| Born: | 25 Apr 1284 | at: | Caernarvon Castle, Carvon, Caernarvonshire, Wales |
| Married: | at: | ||
| Died: | 21 Sep 1327 | at: | Berkeley Castle, Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England |
| Spouses: | Isabelle Princess of France | ||
| Name: | Beatrice Plantagenet [2650] | ||
| Born: | 1286 | at: | Toulouse, Haute-Garonne, France |
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Blanche Plantagenet [2660] | ||
| Born: | 1290 | at: | Windsor Castle, Windsor, Berkshire, England |
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | |||
/--Henry II Plantagenet King of England
/--John 'Lackland' Plantagenet King of England
| \--Eleanor of Aquitaine Queen of England
/--Henry Plantagenet III King of England
| | /--Aymer de Taillefer Count of Angouleme
| \--Isabella de Taillefer Queen of England
| \--Alice de Courtenay Countess of Angou
|--Edward 'Longshanks' Plantagenet I King of England
| /--Alfonso II Alfonsez Provence Prince of Aragon
| /--Raymond Berenger V Count of Provence
| | \--Gersinde II de Sabran Countess of Castile
\--Eleonore Countess of Provence Queen of England
| /--Alfonso II Alfonsez Provence Prince of Aragon
\--Beatrice Countess of Savoy
\--Beatrice (Margaret) de Geneva
/--
/--Alfonso Fernandez IX King of León and Castile
| \--
/--Fernando III 'The Saint' Alfonsez King of Castile and Leon
| | /--Alfonso VIII King of Castile
| \--Berenguela Queen of Castile
| \--Eleanor Plantagenet Princess of England
|--Eleanor of Castile Countess of Ponthieu
| /--
| /--Simon II Count of Dammartin
| | \--
\--Jeanne de Dammartin Countess of Aumale
| /--
\--Marie (Jeanne) Countess of Ponthieu & Montreuil
\--
[2503] Edward I, 1239-1307 (r.1272-1307), was the son and successor of HENRY III. He gained new claims to France through his marriage (1254) to Eleanor of Castile and was responsible for his father's victory in the Barons' War. As king, his conquest of Wales (1277-82) was followed by a long, futile campaign against Scotland (1290-1307). Edward's legal reforms, notably the statutes of Westminster, earned him the title English Justinian. He restricted private and church courts and controlled land grants to the church. His Model Parliament (1295) marked greater participation by the barons, merchants, and clergy whose resistance to war taxation had forced him to confirm previous charters (e.g., Magna Carta). (From www.encyclopedia.com)
This king had a nickname for practically every side of his personality. Edward was tall and nicknamed Longshanks for his long limbs. He was religious, but this king was also devious and called the Leopard. He was a strong fighter who launched invasions into both Scotland and Wales. Edward I was called the Hammer of the Scots, and also built several Welsh fortresses. Some historians call Edward the "father of the longbow", believing -- possibly mistakenly -- that he introduced this supposedly Welsh weapon to the English army.
Edward was a far different character from his father and soon put the country on a footing he preferred. In 1276-77 he brought Llywelyn ap Gruffydd to heel as well as putting the finances of the country back in order after the disasters of the previous reign. In 1282 he was surprised by a Welsh revolt and by the April of 1283 he had subjugated the whole of Wales, killing Llywelyn and capturing his brother Dafydd. Even this proved insufficient to totally overawe Wales and Edward faced further revolts in 1287 and 1295, though neither were as serious as the wars of 1277 and 1282.
With the conquest of Wales Edward began a massive castle building project that is still rightly seen as one of the wonders of the thirteenth century. Towards the end of his reign Edward became increasingly embroiled in bringing Scotland under his direct rule in a similar manner to that which he had achieved in Wales and this proved by and large to be his undoing.
The Welsh campaigns had made heavy drains on the Exchequer and Edward turned more and more to imposing unjust taxes on his peoples and antagonizing his baronage. The conquest of Scotland failed largely because of Edward's success in Wales, he had spent his money and this is why no military masterpieces like Caernarfon or Harlech are to be found in Scotland, where Edward had to content himself more with wooden peels like the one he built at Linlithgow. An increasingly beleaguered Edward, abandoned in some of his campaigns by some of his previously most loyal barons, died crossing the border into Scotland again in 1307.
[3103] Eleanor was only about ten years old when married to the 15 year old Edward of Westminster at Las Huelgas in 1254. Such child marriages were commonplace in Europe in the Middle Ages and the brides were usually consigned to their husbands' families to complete ther education. The marriages were not consummated until the bride reached a suitable age (usually 14 or 15) and in Eleanor's case it seems to have been 18 or 19.
[2658] Elizabeth Plantagenet was born in August of 1282 at Rhuddlan Castle in North Wales. Her father, King Edward I, was on a millitary campaign in Wales, and Queen Eleanor had accompanied him, as was her custom.
Although never done in continental royalty, a few daughters of the English Plantagenet Kings did marry commoners, such as in the case of Elizabeth. This fact is what permits any of the commoners of today to have a royal line of descent.
[2622] Edward II, 1284-1327 (r.1307-27), was a weak king, dissipated and self-indulgent. His reign was noted for internal dissension and the loss of Scotland. His insistence on having his favorite, Piers Gaveston, at court caused rebellion among the barons, who eventually had Gaveston killed. Edward's later favorites, Hugh le Despenser and his son, virtually ruled England (1322-26). They made a truce with Robert I and recognized him as king of Scotland. Edward's wife, Queen Isabella, refused to return from France while the Despensers ruled. She entered into an adulterous alliance with Roger de Mortimer and invaded England. The Despensers were executed and Edward forced to abdicate. He was imprisoned and almost certainly murdered by henchmen of Isabella and Mortimer. (From www.encyclopedia.com)
Preceded by a forthright and powerful monarch, it was not surprising that his successor should be so weak. Edward II had few of the redeeming features of his father and much more resembled his grandfather. His idea of a good time was living as a rustic on his own play farm while the government of the kingdom was left to less than honest favourites.
As a result his reign was punctuated by sporadic explosions amongst his discontented baronage and the rise of a new movement called the Ordainers, who in many respects were the descendants of the reformers of 1258. The Ordainers were decisively defeated in 1322, but Edward failed to capitalize on his success. Instead he was overthrown by his queen and her paramour and put to a grisly 'end' in the dungeons of Berkeley Castle.
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| Husband: Guillaume VII (IX) Duke of Aquitaine | |||
| Born: | 22 Oct 1071 | at: | Aquitaine, France |
| Married: | 1094 | at: | France |
| Died: | 10 Feb 1126 | at: | France |
| Father: | |||
| Mother: | |||
| Sources: | [2735] | ||
| Wife: Philippa (Mathilde or Maude), Countess of Toulouse | |||
| Born: | ABT 1073 | at: | Toulouse, France |
| Died: | 28 Nov 1117 | at: | |
| Father: | |||
| Mother: | |||
| Sources: | [2736] | ||
| Children | |||
| Name: | Guillaume X Duke of Aquitaine [2731] | ||
| Born: | 1099 | at: | Aquitaine, France |
| Married: | at: | ||
| Died: | 19 Apr 1137 | at: | France |
| Spouses: | Elbeanor de Chatellerault | ||
| Name: | Raymond D' Aquitaine [2740] | ||
| Born: | ABT 1097 | at: | of Poitiers, Poitou |
| Died: | 27 Jun 1149 | at: | |
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Adbelahide D' Aquitaine [2741] | ||
| Born: | ABT 1102 | at: | Aquitaine |
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Guillaume I of Valentinois [2742] | ||
| Born: | ABT 1106 | at: | Aquitaine |
| Died: | 4 Mar 1187 | at: | |
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Henri D' Aquitaine [2743] | ||
| Born: | ABT 1101 | at: | Aquitaine |
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Agnaes D' Aquitaine [2744] | ||
| Born: | ABT 1104 | at: | Aquitaine-Pyrénées (Région Moderne), France |
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | |||
/--
/--
| \--
/--
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Guillaume VII (IX) Duke of Aquitaine
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--
| /--
\--
\--
/--
/--
| \--
/--
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Philippa (Mathilde or Maude), Countess of Toulouse
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--
| /--
\--
\--
@1 [2735] [S44]
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| Husband: Alfonso X The Wise King of Castile | |||
| Born: | 23 Nov 1221 | at: | Toledo, Spain |
| Married: | at: | ||
| Died: | 1284 | at: | Seville, Spain |
| Father: | Fernando III 'The Saint' Alfonsez King of Castile and Leon | ||
| Mother: | Beatriz | ||
| Notes: | [3159] | ||
| Wife: Mayor Guillén de Guzman | |||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | 1262 | at: | |
| Father: | |||
| Mother: | |||
| Children | |||
| Name: | Ferdinand | ||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Beatriz of Castile Alfonzo | ||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Urraca | ||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Martin | ||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | |||
/--
/--Alfonso Fernandez IX King of León and Castile
| \--
/--Fernando III 'The Saint' Alfonsez King of Castile and Leon
| | /--Alfonso VIII King of Castile
| \--Berenguela Queen of Castile
| \--Eleanor Plantagenet Princess of England
|--Alfonso X The Wise King of Castile
| /--
| /--King Philip of Swabia
| | \--
\--Beatriz
| /--
\--
\--
/--
/--
| \--
/--
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Mayor Guillén de Guzman
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--
| /--
\--
\--
[3159] King of León and Castile; author of the Royal Code, a compilation of local legislation for general use; originator of The Seven Parts, the code used as a basis for Spanish jurisprudence.
| Husband: Ethelred II King of Kent | |||
| Born: | ABT 0968 | at: | |
| Married: | 1002 | at: | |
| Died: | 1016 | at: | |
| Father: | Edgar The Peaceful | ||
| Mother: | Elfrida | ||
| Notes: | [3153] | ||
| Wife: Emma of Normandy | |||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | 1052 | at: | |
| Father: | Richard I The Fearless Count of Normandy | ||
| Mother: | Gunnor of Denmark | ||
| Children | |||
| Name: | Alfred Athling | ||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | 1036 | at: | |
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Edward The Confessor King of England [3154] | ||
| Born: | Jul 1002 | at: | Islip, Oxfordshire, England |
| Died: | 5 Jan 1066 | at: | |
| Spouses: | |||
/--Edward The Elder
/--Edmund I The Elder
| \--Edgiva
/--Edgar The Peaceful
| | /--
| \--St. Elgiva
| \--
|--Ethelred II King of Kent
| /--
| /--Ordgar of Devon Ealdorman
| | \--
\--Elfrida
| /--
\--
\--
/--
/--
| \--
/--Richard I The Fearless Count of Normandy
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Emma of Normandy
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--Gunnor of Denmark
| /--
\--
\--
[3153] Following the death of his father King Edgar and subsequent murder of his half-brother Edward the Martyr by servants of Ethelred's mother, Ethelred succeeded to the throne at about age ten. His nickname 'the Unready' derives from Old English unrÆd, meaning 'without counsel', 'ill-advised' or 'indecisive'. The majority of his reign (991-1016) was marked by a developing, defensive war against Danish invaders. Finally in 1013 English resistance collapsed and Sweyn conquered the country, forcing Ethelred into exile. Subsequently, Ethelred's control of England was already collapsing once again when he died at London on 23 April 1016. Ethelred was buried in St Paul's Cathedral and was succeeded by his son, Edmund Ironside.
@1 [3154] [S299]
| Husband: John Penry | |||
| Born: | [4837] | at: | Wales |
| Married: | 1926 | at: | England |
| Died: | DECEASED[4838] | at: | England |
| Father: | |||
| Mother: | |||
| Sources: | [4837] [4838] [4839] | ||
| Wife: Frances von Rottenburg | |||
| Born: | 30 Jul 1895[4663] [4664] | at: | |
| Died: | 1980[4665] | at: | Lausanne, Switzerland |
| Father: | Franz 'Fritz' von Rottenburg | ||
| Mother: | Marian Phelps | ||
| Notes: | [4670] | ||
| Sources: | [4663] [4664] [4665] [4666] [4667] [4668] [4669] [4671] | ||
| Children | |||
| Name: | Alex Phelps Penry [4591] [4592] | ||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Marian Penry [4595] | ||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | |||
/--
/--
| \--
/--
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--John Penry
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--
| /--
\--
\--
/--
/--
| \--
/--Franz 'Fritz' von Rottenburg
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Frances von Rottenburg
| /--John Jay Phelps
| /--William Walter Phelps
| | \--Rachel Badgeley Phinney
\--Marian Phelps
| /--John Jay Phelps
\--Ellen Maria 'Loodleloo' Sheffield
\--Maria St. John
[4670] ~[Wilds-Phelps.FTW]
~emails from Alex Phelps, 01-26-00:
~To respond as to my ancestry. My mother was Frances Phelps-Penry. She married, first, Arthur Koch in 1920 in New York, and then, John Penry, a Welsh doctor, in 1926 in England. Her mother was Marian, the Hon. William Walter's only daughter. Marian married, first, Franz von Rottenburg in Bonn in 1893, then, Peters in about 1920. She died, I believe, in 1923. Frances was born in 1896; Phelps Phelps, two years later. You're correct in identifying the arbitrary manner in which Marian reclaimed the family name. There is even a question as to whether she ever divorced Franz legally, though it is known that she renounced his wealth. My mother, Frances, too, continued this arbitrary behaviour in the matter of names -- as well as much else.
~Ellen (if I may) -
~A fascinating message - in part, because it has taken me so long to connect with other branches of the family.
~There is a great deal that I know of the Hon. William Walter, Sheffield's father, and his antecedents. Perhaps you are already fully versed withthe history? In addition, I have a good history of Franz von Rottenburg and ongoing contact with his granddaughter, Irmgard, in Berlin. The murder, however, is news to me and I will check with Irmgard. Do you have any verification for this? Franz was an aide to Bismarck and chief of the Imperial Chancellery around 1890, before becoming Assistant Minister(Under-Secretary, I think) for the Interior. Ill health caused his resignation from this post and, in the latter '90s, he was appointed to the prestigious post of Director of Bonn University. He was married twice: first, in 1876, to the English Marian Hutton, while he was studying law in England -- there were two children, Otto, Irmgard's father, and Elizabeth. Marian died in 1889 and Franz then married the second Marian, William Walter's daughter, in 1893.
~To-date, I have understood that Franz died around 1906. Irmgard, a government lawyer now retired, has said that little was ever told of Franz in her family. It so happens that she is in the process of going through the family's papers, so, perhaps we shall learn more of events.She has a brother who is currently the German Consul in Miami.
~Let me say that I am a writer with a strongly developed sense of history. Also, let me explain that my mother, Frances, left America -- New York -- in 1926, having divorced her first husband by whom she had two children.She never returned and died in 1980 in Lausanne in Switzerland. Part of the reason for this move was her disenchantment with her family. Her brother, Phelps Phelps (yes, you can't get enough of a good thing!), died in 1982 in Wildwood, NJ. I came to know him in his last years. He was, if you will, the "golden boy," and Francis was neglected because of it. Worse, from her point of view, Phelps had a checkered, though rather lively, career. He was thrown out of Yale, the alma mater, for paying another student to take his exams; however, family connections enabled him a pass at Columbia. It is said that he ran numbers for Jimmy Walker, the last of the corrupt Tammany Hall mayors of New York. Then, a Democrat, he got elected to the New York state legislature. During the war he was a captain in the Army and, subsequently, sat on the Japanese War Crimes Tribunal. Truman appointed him ambassador to the Dominican Republic and American Samoa -- where his grandfather had distinguished himself in treaty negotiations, sixty or so years earlier. On Eisenhower's accession, Phelps returned to New Jersey, where he tried to involve himself in state politics. Rebuffed by the "Jersey Jewish political machine" because he was "too willing to air the party's dirty laundry" he was appointed a commissioner to the Palisades Interstate Park Commission, where he remained for ten or more years before retiring. He was, by all accounts a popular figure. After the war he had a weekly radio show of poltical comment, corresponded frequently with the newspapers, and was a devoted baseball fan who knew many of the players. He never married, while living with four women consecutively. There were no children. He ate well, lived well, had a great time -- and my mother hated him. We were never allowed to mention his name.
~My own research into the history of William Walter's two sons, your great-grandfather, Sheffield, and John Jay -- Captain Jack, as he came to beknown - have yielded, so far, little information. All I know of Sheffieldis that he went into the newspaper business (?). This would have made sense in light of William Walter's close friendship with various newspapermen, including the distinguished William Whitelaw of the New York Tribune. Otherwise, I am aware that Sheffield had three children. Are you descended from William Walter, the oldest, or EleanorSheffield?
~As for John Jay, he, somewhat like Phelps Phelps, seems to have had a good time, traveling and living it up at the Red House in Teaneck, NJ. It is said that he offered Roosevelt his steam launch to patrol the Eastcoast during the war. I gather he died about 1941. I know that he married Rose Hutchinson and had two children, Dorothy and Rose. Dorothy married a Dr. West and there is at least one son, Andrew, an architect who worked for I M Pei. I have tried unsuccessfully to contact him. I believe he is now retired. Not long ago, I made contact with Bob Griffin, then of the Teaneck Historical Society. He is a great Phelps fan and produced a video of Teaneck focusing on the latter part of the 19th century and including numerous references to William Walter. I have visited Teaneck and Yale and read in depth of William Walter's times and friends.
~Tell me, if you can, anything of Sheffield and John Jay and their descendants. As I indicated earlier, my mother, Frances, more or less cut herself off from the family and consequently I know little of them and have always been curious. I live in Vermont - al, P.O.Box 206, Hartland, VT 05048; (802) 436-2576; fax, 802-436-3439 - and havebeen in America since 1966. I am the only member of the family to live here; the rest, in Europe.
~I am happy to share any and all information about the family. Specificquestions are helpful and give me an idea of how much you know. As Isaid, I have done copious research on the life and times of the the Hon.William Walter and am always interested in new material.
~Alex
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| Husband: Fremont Cilley | |||
| Born: | 15 Mar 1857 | at: | Warrensburg, Warren, New York, United States |
| Married: | 11 Jan 1880 | at: | Warren, New York, USA |
| Died: | 23 Apr 1937 | at: | Bolton, Warren, New York, USA |
| Father: | Elbridge Gerry Cilley | ||
| Mother: | Sylvia Ann Phelps | ||
| Notes: | [4997] | ||
| Wife: Harriet Roberts | |||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Father: | |||
| Mother: | |||
| Children | |||
| Name: | Bertha Belle Cilley | ||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Married: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | Willis Marshall Shaw | ||
/--
/--
| \--
/--Elbridge Gerry Cilley
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Fremont Cilley
| /--Norman Phelps Sr.
| /--Norman Phelps Jr.
| | \--Sarah Cole
\--Sylvia Ann Phelps
| /--Norman Phelps Sr.
\--Hannah Chase
\--
/--
/--
| \--
/--
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Harriet Roberts
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--
| /--
\--
\--
[4997] Fremont and Harriet had 10 children.
| Husband: Stephen Samborne | |||
| Born: | 4 Sep 1671 | at: | Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire, United States |
| Married: | 26 Jul 1693 | at: | |
| Died: | 21 Jun 1750 | at: | Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire, United States |
| Father: | William Samborne | ||
| Mother: | Mary (Moulton) Philbrick | ||
| Wife: Hannah Philbrick | |||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Father: | |||
| Mother: | |||
| Children | |||
/--Edward Samborne
/--Richard Samborne
| \--
/--William Samborne
| | /--Stephen Bachiler
| \--Anne Bachiler
| \--Elizabeth
|--Stephen Samborne
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--Mary (Moulton) Philbrick
| /--
\--
\--
/--
/--
| \--
/--
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Hannah Philbrick
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--
| /--
\--
\--
| Husband: Gottlob Sigrist | |||
| Born: | 26 Feb 1823 | at: | Hoepfigheim, Wuerttemberg, Germany |
| Married: | 14 Apr 1850 | at: | Hoepfigheim, Wuerttemberg, Germany |
| Died: | 4 Oct 1891 | at: | Hoepfigheim, Wuerttemberg, Germany |
| Father: | Johann Christf Sigrist | ||
| Mother: | Friedrike Christine Vohmann | ||
| Wife: Christiane Enderle | |||
| Born: | 16 Sep 1823 | at: | Hoepfigheim, Wuerttemberg, Germany |
| Died: | 5 Mar 1901 | at: | Hoepfigheim, Wuerttemberg, Germany |
| Father: | Johann Friedrich Enderle | ||
| Mother: | Katherina Barbara Schempp | ||
| Children | |||
/--
/--
| \--
/--Johann Christf Sigrist
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Gottlob Sigrist
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--Friedrike Christine Vohmann
| /--
\--
\--
/--Johann Friedrich Enderle
/--Johann Christian Enderle
| \--Anna Katharina Sperr
/--Johann Friedrich Enderle
| | /--Johann Georg Borzel
| \--Maria Dorothea Borzel
| \--Anna Maria Schwarz
|--Christiane Enderle
| /--
| /--Johann Michael Schempp
| | \--
\--Katherina Barbara Schempp
| /--
\--Katherina Barbara Schmid
\--
| Husband: Samuel Egleston | |||
| Born: | at: | Exeter, England | |
| Married: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Father: | Egleston | ||
| Mother: | |||
| Sources: | [13004] | Wife: (--?--) | |
| Children | |||
| Name: | Ebenezer Egleston [13003] | ||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Married: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | |||
/--
/--
| \--
/-- Egleston
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Samuel Egleston
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--
| /--
\--
\--
@1 [13004] [S80]
@1 [13003] [S80]
| Husband: Richard Cummings | |||
| Born: | ABT 1581 | at: | England |
| Married: | 1606 | at: | Of Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Or, Saco, York County, Maine |
| Died: | 1676 | at: | Scarborough, Maine |
| Father: | |||
| Mother: | |||
| Sources: | [13310] | ||
| Wife: (--?--) Bonython | |||
| Born: | ABT 1606 | at: | Major, To Saco, Maine |
| Died: | at: | ||
| Father: | Capt. Richard Bonython | ||
| Mother: | Lucretia Leigh | ||
| Sources: | [13311] | ||
| Children | |||
| Name: | Thomas Cumming [13312] | ||
| Born: | ABT 1648 | at: | Of Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Or, Saco, York County, Maine |
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Elizabeth Cummings [13296] | ||
| Born: | 1607 | at: | York, Maine |
| Married: | at: | ||
| Died: | 16 May 1699 | at: | Springfield, Hampden, Massachusetts, United States |
| Spouses: | John Harmon | ||
/--
/--
| \--
/--
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Richard Cummings
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--
| /--
\--
\--
/--
/--
| \--
/--Capt. Richard Bonython
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--(--?--) Bonython
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--Lucretia Leigh
| /--
\--
\--
@1 [13310] [S44]
@1 [13311] [S44]
@1 [13312] [S44]
@1 [13296] [S44]
| Husband: Richard Bass | |||
| Born: | [13749] | at: | |
| Married: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Father: | |||
| Mother: | |||
| Wife: Grace Ogden | |||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Father: | |||
| Mother: | |||
| Children | |||
| Name: | Mary Bass [13752] [13750] | ||
| Born: | 1904[13750] | at: | Tennessee, United States |
| Married: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | Felix Matthew Beasley | ||
/--
/--
| \--
/--
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Richard Bass
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--
| /--
\--
\--
/--
/--
| \--
/--
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Grace Ogden
| /--
| /--
| | \--
\--
| /--
\--
\--
@1 [13749] [S35]
@1 [13752] [S35]
@1 [13750] [S35]
| Husband: Albert Hayden | |||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Married: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Father: | Glenn Hayden | ||
| Mother: | Mildred Joan Hyde | Wife: (--?--) | |
| Children | |||
| Name: | John Hayden | ||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | |||
| Name: | Leonard Hayden | ||
| Born: | at: | ||
| Died: | at: | ||
| Spouses: | |||
/--
/--
| \--
/--Glenn Hayden
| | /--
| \--
| \--
|--Albert Hayden
| /--
| /--Rosel Ion Hyde
| | \--
\--Mildred Joan Hyde
| /--
\--Afton Loveland
\--Nancy Afton Tolman
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