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    • Possible Origins of the Family in Germany and Italy
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    • Phelps Origins in Nether Tyne, Checkley, England
    • Decendants of James Phelps of Nether Tyne, England
    • Decendants of James Phelps of Tewkesbury, England
  • Phelps Towns & Villages
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    • Voyage of the Hercules in 1633/34
    • Voyage of the Recovery in 1633/34
  • Phelps Arrival in America
    • Nathaniel Phelps of Dorchester, Connecticut
    • William Phelps of Northampton, Massachusetts
    • Elnathian Phelps b. c1734
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      • King Charles Persecutes Puritans
      • John Phelps Regicide to Charles I
      • Phelps Entries in the Great Migration Begins
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    • Founders of Ancient Windsor, Connecticut
    • Estimated Population of American Colonies 1620 to 1780
    • Crime and Punishment in Simsbury
    • Organization of the Church in Windsor
    • The Phelps Homestead in Simsbury
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    • Isaac Ensign and Cornelia Phelps
    • Ensign Letters from Simsbury to Forsyth
    • Correspondance of Oliver Roswell Phelps and Georgia Phelps
    • Ensign Family Letters
  • Phelps from New York to Illinois
    • Nehemiah West Leads the Settlers West
    • Hoosiers vs. Yankees: A Slave State or Not?
    • The (Ill-fated) Boat Party
    • Pioneer Architecture: From Log Cabins to Homes
    • Galesburg Grows Amidst the Jackson Panic
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  • Family Origins in Illinois
    • Noble Phelps Moves West to Illinois
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    • Premium for Phelps Best Farm
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    • Ronald Aaron Noble Phelps 1881 Bio
    • Avery Company History
  • Phelps Family in California
    • Bart Phelps, Navy Telegrapher Radioman
    • Bart Phelps, Yerba Buena 1916 Radio Operations
    • Bart Phelps, Wailupe 1921 Radio Operations
    • Bart Phelps, Alaska 1924 Radio Operations
    • Annabeth Beasley Phelps
    • Harold Bartle "Bud" Phelps III
    • A Generation Passes
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    • The Daily Journal of Births and Deaths
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    • Henry Hart Bartle Obituary
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    • Nathanial Sanburn 1723, Kingston New Hampshire
    • Francis G. Sanburn 1899, of Knoxville, Illinois
    • William Toy Bartle Ministry
    • Nathanial Sanborn, 1814, of Canandaigua, New York
  • Beasley Family
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    • The Price of Slaves 1850
    • Luther S. Beasley 1925 Obituary
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    • John Beasley and Lizzie Bremser Marriage
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    • Jane Beasley Raph Professional Life
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    • Annabeth Beasley Phelps, Mother and Provider
    • Annabeth Beasley Phelps 2001 Obituary
    • Brandy Station in the Civil War
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    • A Hero in Our Midst—Mac Butler's "Battlin' Blue Bastards"
    • Ephraim Beazley 1797 Deeds and Records
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  • Bremser Family
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    • Finding Heinrich Gottlieb Bremser
    • The Family History
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      • Mystery Revealed
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    • Claggett Family Genealogy
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    • Robert Clagget 1490 in England
    • Edward Clagett 1670 Emigration to America
    • Thomas Claggett 1703 of London and Maryland
    • Thomas Clagett 1732 Will
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    • Samuel Claggett 1846 of Virginia
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    • Bernard Johnson Claggett 1919 Bio
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      • Deposition of Columbia Claggett
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    • Thomas J. Claggett 1901 Obituary
    • Columbia Claggett 1904 Obituary
    • Brice Clagett, Family Genealogist
    • Claggett Coat of Arms
  • Diuguid Family
    • Diuguid Family Genealogy
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  • Klein Family
    • Klein Family Genealogy
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    • Klein Visit to 1922 Germany
  • Notable Family Members
    • 1600-1699
      • John Phelps, Court Clerk at the Trial of King Charles I
      • Anson Green Phelps, Merchant and Philanthropist
    • 1700-1799
      • Richard Phelps, Bell-founder for English Churches
      • Dr. Francis Phelps, Representative and Senator
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      • Noah Phelps, A Spy at Ticonderoga, A Patriot of 1776
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    • 1800-1849 A-M
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      • Austin Phelps, Congregational Minister, Educator
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      • John Wolcott Phelps, Brigadier General, United States Volunteers
      • Mary Phelps Rich, Pioneer Saint in Tazewell County, Illinois
      • Francis G. Sanburn, Pioneer Resident of Knoxville, Illinois
    • 1800-1849 N-Z
      • Mary Anne Phelps Rich, Mormon Pioneer
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      • William Walter Phelps, Congressman, Ambassador, Judge
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    • 1900-2020
      • Chance Russel Phelps, Private, USMC
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  • Selected Family Wills
    • Thomas and Katherine Phylypp Wills 1556, Over Teyne, Checkeley, England
    • William Phelps 1672 Will, Windsor, Connecticut
    • Anthony Phillipps 1648 Will, Nether Teane, England
    • Francis Phylyppe 1648 Will, Checkley, England
    • Thomas Phylypp 1556 Will, Over Teyne, England
    • George Phelps 1687 Will, Westfield, Massachusetts
    • Timothy Phelps 1639 Will, Windsor, Connecticut
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    • John Loveland 1649 Will
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    • James Phelps of North Caroline 1786 Estate
    • Robert Valentine Phelps 1905 Australia
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Emperor of The Holy Roman Empire Charlemagne / Luitgard Queen of Laon


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Emperor of The Holy Roman Empire Charlemagne / Luitgard Queen of Laon

Husband: Emperor of The Holy Roman Empire Charlemagne
Born: 2 Apr 0742at: Ingelheim, Rheinhessen, Hesse-Darmstadt
Married: ABT 0772at:
Died: 28 Jan 0813at: Aachen, Rhineland, Prussia
Father: Pepin 'The Short' Franks
Mother: Bertrada Countess of Laon
Notes: [3737]
Wife: Luitgard Queen of Laon
Born: ABT 0757at: Allemania, Germany
Died: 4 Jun 0800at: Tours, Indre-Et-Loire, France
Father:
Mother:
Children
Name: Carloman Pippin of Italy
Born: Apr 0773at:
Married: at:  
Died: 8 Jul 0810at:
Spouses: Bertha

Pedigree Chart for: Emperor of The Holy Roman Empire Charlemagne

      /--Pepin   II
   /--Charles  Martel 
   |  \--Alpaida   
/--Pepin 'The Short'  Franks 
|  |  /--Leutwinus  Treves 
|  \--Chrotrud of  Alemania 
|     \--
|--Emperor of The Holy Roman Empire  Charlemagne 
|     /--
|  /--Heribert   Count of Laon
|  |  \--
\--Bertrada   Countess of Laon
   |  /--
   \--Bertrada   
      \--

Pedigree Chart for: Luitgard Queen of Laon

      /--
   /--
   |  \--
/--
|  |  /--
|  \--
|     \--
|--Luitgard   Queen of Laon
|     /--
|  /--
|  |  \--
\--
   |  /--
   \--
      \--

[3737] Charlemagne, Emperor Of The Holy Roman Empire, King of the Franks was king of the Franks from AD 768 to 814 and 'Emperor of the Romans' from 800 to 814. He became a key figure in the development of western Europe's medieval civilization. By his almost constant military campaigns, Charlemagne created a vast empire in the West which included much of the western part of the old Roman Empire as well as some new territory. He was the first Germanic ruler to assume the title of emperor, and the 'empire' he revived lasted in one form or another for a thousand years. Culturally and politically, he left his mark on the newly rising civilization of the West. Probably no ruler of the early Middle Ages better deserved the title of 'The Great.' Charlemagne was the son of Pepin the Short, and the grandson of Charles Martel. From 768 to 771, Charlemagne shared Pepin's kingdom with his brother, Carloman. When Carloman died, Charlemagne became sole ruler. He took up with energy the work begun by his father and grandfather. His first step was to repress his hostile neighbors. Charlemagne gained wide acclaim for his outstanding military ability, persistence, and success. He waged more than 50 campaigns against neighboring Germanic peoples on all sides, and against the Avars, Slavs, Byzantines, and Moors. Charlemagne's first great war was against the Lombards, a Germanic people who had invaded Italy in the late 500's. They had been a source of trouble to the popes ever since. In conquering them, Charlemagne followed Pepin's policy of friendship and cooperation with the Roman Catholic Church. This also served Charlemagne's own interests, because he became ruler of the Lombard kingdom in Italy. The long Saxon war was the most important of Charlemagne's military ventures. The Saxons, who held the whole northwestern part of Germany, were pagans. Their defeat after 30 years of war prepared the way for the religious conversion and civilization of Germany. By means of other wars, Charlemagne put down a rebellion in Aquitaine, added Bavaria to his kingdom, and established several border states to protect his outlying conquests. In eastern Europe, he defeated the Slavs and Avars and made possible eastward migration by the Germans. Charlemagne had built a vast and sprawling state that shared borders with such different peoples as the Slavs, Byzantines, and Moslems. He defended the Roman Catholic Church and constantly extended its power. He was far more powerful than the imperial successors of Constantine, the first Christian emperor in the West, and he ruled a much more extensive area. Because of his great holdings, he decided to revive the Roman Empire, but as a new empire that was European and Christian in Character. The relations of the popes with the Byzantine, or Eastern Roman, emperors in Canstantinople had been breaking down since the middle 700's. An alliance between the Roman Catholic Church and the Franks, accomplished by proclaiming Charlemagne emperor, made good sense. Pope Leo III placed the imperial crown on Charlemagne's head on Christmas Day, 800. The most important effect of this act was that it revived the idea of empire in the West, an idea which caused both harm and good in succeeding centuries. Einhard, Charlemagne's secretary and friend, described the emperor as large and strong of body, fond of active exercise, genial but dignified, and sensible and moderate in his way of life. Charlemagne clearly recognized his duties and responsibilities, and was a tireless worker. He could not reverse the long trend toward decentralized government. But he could and did control the power of the nobles and maintain a considerable degree of law and order in a troubled age. His administrative methods helped raise the standard of living. Charlemagne's greatest contribution was his work as a patron of culture and extender of civilization. The Palace School, set up at his capital in Aachen under the leadership of the English scholar Alcuin (735-804), stimulated interest in education, philosophy, and literature. Most of the leading scholars were churchman, so this vast cultural activity greatly strengthened the church and had far-reaching and lasting results. In this way, Charlemagne, by means of his power and eminence, gave western Europe a unified culture so strong that it survived the terrible invasions and disorders of the next 200 years. Source: 'The World Book Encyclopedia', 1968, C291-292. 'Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists ...', Frederick Lewis Weis, 1993, p cvi.

 

Adolph M. Tate / (--?--)

Husband: Adolph M. Tate
Born: 23 Jun 1828at: Fayette, Pennsylvania, USA
Married: at:  
Died: Jan 1903at:
Father: Lee Patterson Tate
Mother: Sarah A. Eberhardt
Wife: (--?--)
Children
Name: Adolph M. Tate Jr.
Born: at:
Died: at:
Spouses:
Name: Cecelia Tate
Born: at:
Died: at:
Spouses:

Pedigree Chart for: Adolph M. Tate

      /--
   /--
   |  \--
/--Lee Patterson  Tate 
|  |  /--
|  \--
|     \--
|--Adolph M.  Tate 
|     /--
|  /--Adolph  Ebeerhart  Sr.
|  |  \--
\--Sarah A.  Eberhardt 
   |  /--
   \--Elizabeth  Phillips 
      \--Joanna  Prather 


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