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1601
Miles clears the air about his candidacy
Miles clears the air about his candidacy
Article in Reading (Pennsylvania) Times, 30 May 1872.
Image by Gary Zentmyer
 
1602
Miles is open for business in Huntingdon, Pennsylvania
Miles is open for business in Huntingdon, Pennsylvania
A 'business card' advertisement in the Huntingdon Journal dated 4 Jan 1871.
Image by Gary Zentmyer
 
1603
Miles moves to Grand Island, Nebraska
Miles moves to Grand Island, Nebraska
Article dated 1891
Image by Gary Zentmyer
 
1604
Miles Zentmyer
Miles Zentmyer
From the Zentmyer Collection, colorized with AI.
 
1605
Miles Zentmyer Obituary
Miles Zentmyer Obituary
Published in the Omaha World-Herald, 20 Sep 1911
Image by Gary Zentmyer
 
1606
Miles Zentmyer's discharge from the Union Army
Miles Zentmyer's discharge from the Union Army
From the Zentmyer Collection. Dated December 6, 1865
 
1607
Miles Zentmyer's Obituary
Miles Zentmyer's Obituary
In the Schuyler Messinger, September 22, 1911
 
1608
Miles Zentmyer, Civil War Veteran
Miles Zentmyer, Civil War Veteran
This monument is at the headstone for Miles and Jennie Zentmyer in the Schuyler Cemetery. The subtext is in the Schuyler Museum record for civil war veterans buried in the Schuyler Cemetery.
 
1609
Milton Strahorn's house in 1883 per map below.
Milton Strahorn's house in 1883 per map below.
On Newark Road, south of Pine Street
 
1610
Miss Jeanette Lehman - French Millinery
Miss Jeanette Lehman - French Millinery
Open for Business - Notice in the (Philadelphia) National Gazette, 17 Apr 1828, a plucky 22-year-old!
 
1611
Monroe St. Bridge Viaduct
Monroe St. Bridge Viaduct
From the Zentmyer Collection. Robert built a railroad viaduct which crossed the Monroe St. Bridge and the Spokane River at the same place. This structure was completed in 1914, and was a feat of engineering to say the least. Robert was an early champion of the concept of grade separation, that is running railroad lines and automobile traffic at different elevations so as to avoid conflicts.
 
1612
Monument Cemetery Headstones used for riprap
Monument Cemetery Headstones used for riprap
At the base of the Betsy Ross Bridge over the Delaware River, Philadelphia. "Riprap is rock or other material used to armor shorelines, streambeds, bridge abutments, pilings and other shoreline structures against scour and water or ice erosion." - Wikipedia
 
1613
Monument Cemetery Registry Book - Brutsche closeup
Monument Cemetery Registry Book - Brutsche closeup
Page 321, showing burial dates and ages
 
1614
Monument Cemetery Registry Book - full page view
Monument Cemetery Registry Book - full page view
Page 321
 
1615
Monument Cemetery Registry Book - relocation to Lawnview
Monument Cemetery Registry Book - relocation to Lawnview
Page 321, showing where the Brutschés' remains were relocated in Lawnview Cemetery, Rockledge, Pennsylvania, to Susquehanna Lawn, Section 64, Grave 51
 
1616
Monument Cemetery Relocation to Lawnview Cemetery in Rockledge, Montgomery, Pennsylvania
Monument Cemetery Relocation to Lawnview Cemetery in Rockledge, Montgomery, Pennsylvania
Monument Cemetery held over 28,000 graves when the land was purchased by Temple University to create a parking lot and athletic fields. While many graves were identified and relocated intact, including some of the Brutsches and Lehmans, the remains of over 20,000 people were exhumed and buried anonymously in a mass grave at Lawnview Cemetery. Most of the headstones from Monument Cemetery were dumped as riprap for the Betsy Ross Bridge over the Delaware River, many of which can be still seen today at low tide.
 
1617
Monument for Elijah Hobart
Monument for Elijah Hobart
Located in Hope Cemetery, Waterbury, Washington, Vermont
Photo courtesy Barb Destromp
 
1618
Monument to William Bradford in Plymouth, Massachusetts
Monument to William Bradford in Plymouth, Massachusetts
 
1619
Mortonhouse Ship's List
Mortonhouse Ship's List
The Mortonhouse arrived in Philadelphia 23 Aug 1728, from Rotterdam last of Deal, John Coultas Commander.
 
1620
Mortuary record for Samuel Lehman
Mortuary record for Samuel Lehman
From Moore Undertakers. It is unclear why Samuel's executor paid for two burial permits and two pine cases, unless one of his children died near October of 1867, as we do not have death dates for Samuel or Elisabetha Lehman.
 
1621
Mr. Zentmyer is not at heart a Bryan man
Mr. Zentmyer is not at heart a Bryan man
From the Columbus Journal, 24 Oct 1894
Image by Gary Zentmyer
 
1622
Mrs. Strayhorn on Township Map
Mrs. Strayhorn on Township Map
Margaret Cornelius Strayhorn in northern Buffalo Township, Union County Pennsylvania in 1856
 
1623
Mrs. Zentmyer had a cat problem
Mrs. Zentmyer had a cat problem
In the Schuyler Messinger
 
1624
Mudbrook Cemetery
Mudbrook Cemetery
Photo courtesy Barbara Richardson Smith
 
1625
Mudbrook Cemetery, Massillion, Stark County, Ohio
Mudbrook Cemetery, Massillion, Stark County, Ohio
 
1626
Muhen, Aargau, Switzerland
Muhen, Aargau, Switzerland
Your webmaster visited Muhen in November of 2018
 
1627
Muster Role for Robert Strayhorn dated January 9, 1777
Muster Role for Robert Strayhorn dated January 9, 1777
The National Archives interprets Robert Strain as Robert Strayhorn, and we do not disagree. As most immigrants could not read nor write, scribes simply wrote down how they heard a name pronounced, so 'Strain' was probably a contraction of Strayhorn, pronounced Stray'n.
 
1628
Myrtle Bell Marlow
Myrtle Bell Marlow
 
1629
Naturalization Application, submitted 7 Nov 1831, granted 10 April 1834
Naturalization Application, submitted 7 Nov 1831, granted 10 April 1834
"Born in Germany in the Dukedom of Baden," although birth year of 1804 is in conflict with Ship's Manifest, (1802) Death Certificate, (1801) and Birth Record. (1801)
Image courtesy Gary Zentmyer
 
1630
Naturalization Petition for August Joseph O'Connor
Naturalization Petition for August Joseph O'Connor
 
1631
Nebraska Gazetteer and Business Directory, 1879-80
Nebraska Gazetteer and Business Directory, 1879-80
For Schuyler area
Image by Gary Zentmyer
 
1632
New Headstone
New Headstone
 
1633
New London Presbyterian Cemetery, Chester County, Pennsylvania - Old Cemetery
New London Presbyterian Cemetery, Chester County, Pennsylvania - Old Cemetery
The New London Presbyterian Church was founded in 1728. It is believed, albeit absent documentation, that Robert Strayhorn who died after 1820 and his son Samuel Strayhorn who died in 1858 are buried in the Old Cemetery, where many headstones have either disappeared or have been buried. Burials in the Old Cemetery continued until 1887, after which all new burials were in the New Cemetery. Samuel moved to New London prior to 1810 and belonged to the New London Presbyterian Church, and there is evidence for Robert living there in 1820. Samuel's sons Robert and Samuel and their wives were buried across the street in the New Cemetery, and their headstones are intact.
Image by Gary Zentmyer
 
1634
New Memorial at Proctor's Ledge
New Memorial at Proctor's Ledge
The Gallows Hill Project, a group of seven area scholars, announced in 2016 that it had finally identified the location of Gallows Hill after five years of research using court records, maps, ground-penetrating radar and aerial photographs. It was determined that the actual site was a place called Proctor's Ledge in Salem. A new memorial was constructed there in 2017, with separate stone markers for each of the nineteen hanging victims.
 
1635
Newark Leader newspaper, Newark, Ohio, September 3, 1920
Newark Leader newspaper, Newark, Ohio, September 3, 1920
Wm. M. Zentmyer, Dealer in Ice and Coal
 
1636
Newspaper Article
Newspaper Article
 
1637
Newspaper article about speedy engineer Zentmyer
Newspaper article about speedy engineer Zentmyer
This article is the only source we have found indicating Enos' middle initial W. stood for Wesley, but we accept it.
 
1638
Newspaper article announcing Harry Brutsche's birth
In the Clarion-Ledger, Jackson Mississippi, 6 Jan 1945
(At least one living or private individual is linked to this item - Details withheld.)
 
1639
Newspaper Article concerning John H. Zentmyer
Newspaper Article concerning John H. Zentmyer
 
1640
Newspaper article in Tyrone, Pennsylvania
Newspaper article in Tyrone, Pennsylvania
This John is by far the best candidate to be the farmer in question.
 
1641
Newspaper article regarding Everett's intelligence
Newspaper article regarding Everett's intelligence
 
1642
Newspaper article, 1861
Newspaper article, 1861
 
1643
Newspaper articles reporting the Dudley - Brereton wedding, 20 Feb 1937
Newspaper articles reporting the Dudley - Brereton wedding, 20 Feb 1937
In the Charleston, Illinois Journal-Gazette, and the Decatur, Illinois Herald.
 
1644
Newspaper Death Record for William Morris
Newspaper Death Record for William Morris
 
1645
Newspaper Item From 1863
Newspaper Item From 1863
The year was 1863, and the nation was in the midst of the Civil War. John's sons David and Franklin had died at Fredericksburg the previous year, and John was understandably upset. John was running for a seat in the State Legislature, and was questioned as to his loyalty to the Union cause.
 
1646
Newspaper Notice
Newspaper Notice
Samuel Strayhorn, Hartley Township, Grand Juror
Image by Gary Zentmyer
 
1647
Nieuw Amsterdam in 1656
Nieuw Amsterdam in 1656
On the southern tip of Manhattan Island, which was renamed New York in 1664.
 
1648
Nineteen-year-old Le Roi K. Brereton sailed from Copenhagen to New York on 13 Sep 1927 on the SS United States.
Nineteen-year-old Le Roi K. Brereton sailed from Copenhagen to New York on 13 Sep 1927 on the SS United States.
Le Roi K. Brereton shared a birth date and place with Kenneth Leroy Brereton.
 
1649
Nona Zentmyer
Nona Zentmyer
 
1650
Norma Jean St. Myer Death Certificate
Norma Jean St. Myer Death Certificate
 

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