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Matches 4,151 to 4,200 of 5,019

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4151 Plumber Applegate, John (I14078)
 
4152 Police Applegate, William R (I14070)
 
4153 Police Applegate, William R (I14070)
 
4154 Police Applegate, William R (I14070)
 
4155 Police Applegate, Daniel B (I14086)
 
4156 Police Applegate, Daniel B (I14086)
 
4157 Police Officer Applegate, William R (I14070)
 
4158 Police Officer Applegate, Robert (I38135)
 
4159 Policeman Applegate, Garrett Stryker (I5783)
 
4160 Policeman Applegate, William Albert (I2266)
 
4161 Policeman Applegate, William R (I14070)
 
4162 Policeman Applegate, William R (I14070)
 
4163 Policeman Applegate, William R (I14070)
 
4164 Policeman Applegate, Daniel B (I14086)
 
4165 Policeman Applegate, Daniel B (I14086)
 
4166 Policeman Applegate, Daniel B (I14086)
 
4167 Polisher (shoe factory) Spence, Bennie D (I38280)
 
4168 Politician Broussard, Robert F (I41725)
 
4169 possibly "livery merchant" Applegate, Daniel Wesley (I18020)
 
4170 possibly a duplicate of Mary Martin Applegate, Nacy (I42406)
 
4171 Possibly Lucretia Byrd Byrd, Lucretia (I28449)
 
4172 possibly Pike County, Illinois, USA Hack, Laura Dale (I19574)
 
4173 possibly spurious entry Applegate, Emma G (I27758)
 
4174 possibly the same person as alberta Applegate, Alvaretta E (I42840)
 
4175 possibly the same person as alvaretta Applegate, Alberta (I42834)
 
4176 Post Office Applegit, William H (I36026)
 
4177 Postal Clerk Applegate, William Charles (I4394)
 
4178 Postal Clerk Applegate, Perrine Kossuth (I1296)
 
4179 Postmaster Applegate, George Herbert (I25503)
 
4180 Potato Sorter Applegate, Willard J (I42157)
 
4181 potentially spurious Applegate, David S (I26518)
 
4182 Potter Furman, Noah (I14972)
 
4183 Potter Applegate, Hamilton (I26294)
 
4184 Potter and Toll Gatherer Applegate, Hamilton (I26294)
 
4185 Pottery Applegate, John (I43661)
 
4186 Poultry Raiser Applegate, Richard Linwood Powell (I14523)
 
4187 PR1 William Franklyn Applegate, b. abt. 1808 in South Carolina (1850 US Census, NY, Herkimer Co., German Flats Twp., 395/423 [age 42, birthplace SC]; 1855 NY State Census, Herkimer Co., Litchfield, 165/173 [age 40, birthplace SC]; but see 1900 US Census, MN, Mille Lacs Co., Princeton Twp., 6/245, sheet 15A, 191/192 [census entry for son Henry states his father was born in NJ]); d. bef. 1860, when his wife is listed without him in the Census. He married on 27 December 1831 in Macedon, Wayne Co., NY (http://www.co.wayne.ny.us/hist-search/ [dynamic search for “Applegate”; citing Wayne Sentinel, 20 December 1831 {Newspaper}]) Elizabeth Gardner ("Minnesota, Deaths and Burials, 1835-1990," index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/FDMG-J4B : accessed 09 May 2013), Henry Applegate, 01 Feb 1906 [death certificate of son Henry gives her maiden name])
b. abt 1812 in Niagara County, New York (1850 US Census, supra [age 39, birthplace NY]; 1855 NY State Census, supra [age 40, birthplace Niagra Co.]; 1860 US Census, NY, Herkimer Co., German Flatts, p. 36, 284/288 [age 48, birthplace NY]; 1875 MN State Census, Mille Lacs Co., p. 1073, #66 [age 56, birthplace NY]; 1885 MN State Census, Mille Lacs Co., Princeton, p. 20, #149 [age 73, birthplace NY]; 1900 US Census, NY, Herkimer Co., 7/46, sheet 16B, 375/401 [July 1812, birthplace NY]); d. 17 Jan 1904, in Utica, NY (Princeton Union, February 18, 1904, p. 7); bur. in Mohawk Cemetery, Mohawk, Herkimer Co., NY (Findagrave Memorial # 59080523).

William’s parentage is a mystery. While there are other Applegates in Montgomery and Herkimer Counties in New York, he does not seem to be related to them. There are no known Applegates in South Carolina at the beginning of the 19th Century. UPDATE 2013-06-21: There are traces of two Applegates in South Carolina. The first is William Applegate, identified as a constable there in 1821. 2 McCord (13 S.C.L.) 110 (S.C. Const. Ct. 1822). He may be the same William Applegate mentioned in the case of DeBow v. Applegate, 3 McCord (S.C.) 44, but the report in that case is very abbreviated. The second is a John Applegate who served in the Charleston Militia under Captain James Bentham in 1778. Bobby Gilmer Ross, Roster of South Carolina Patriots in the American Revolution, Volume 1, A-J, p. 24 (citing S.C.H.&G., LIII, 15).

William married in Wayne County, New York, and the Wayne County, NY historical website does contain references to a few Applegates, but I cannot determine as of yet how or whether they are related to William. I list them here for later reference.

N
Applegate, Cornelia Marries Augustus Gould, Lyons Lyons Gazette 5/26/1852 File No:
Book:
Page: 3/1 Lyons No
C
Applegate, Joseph Infant Format: micro Presbyterian, Newark 1831/09/11 File No:
Book: Baptisms
Page: ARCADIA No
N
Applegate, Robert Sheriff's sale, Arcadia Lyons Argus, Western Argus 1/25/1832 File No:
Book:
Page: 3/4 Arcadia No
N
Applegate, Susan Marries Uberto Finch, Lyons Wayne County Whig 2/17/1841 File No:
Book:
Page: 2/2 Lyons No
C
Applegate, Susan Ann marriage, Alberto Finch Format: micro Presbyterian, Lyons, First 1841/02/11 File No:
Book: Marriages
Page: 16 Lyons No

http://www.co.wayne.ny.us/hist-search/Search_Results.aspx?Name=appleg&Part=True

I believe I have found William and family in the 1840 Census in Warren, Herkimer County, New York. The household contained three males under 5—corresponding to William Jr., Henry, and Lewis—and two females 5-10, which would be Ellen and another unknown daughter. A man 30-40 and a woman 20-30—probably William and Elizabeth—round out household.

In 1850, William’s family was enumerated in German Flatts, Herkimer County, New York. William was 42, a harness maker, and born in South Carolina; Elizabeth was 39, and born in NY; Ellen was 15, and born in NY; William (Jr) was 14, and born in NY; Lewis was 10, and born in NY; Lucy was 4, born in NY; and Mary was 12, born in NY.

In 1855, the family was enumerated in the NY State Census in Litchfield, Herkimer Co. William was 40, and born in SC; Elizabeth was 40, and born in Niagara Co., NY; William (Jr) was 18 and born in Oswego Co., NY; Henry was 17, and born in Herkimer Co., NY; Lewis was 12, and born in Herkimer Co., NY; Lucy was 8, and born in Herkimer Co., NY; Mary was 4, and born in Herkimer Co., NY; Melvin was 3, and born in Herkimer Co., NY.

William is gone by 1860. Elizabeth was enumerated with her three youngest living children—Lewis, Mary, and Melvin in German Flatts.

In 1863, Mrs. Elizabeth Applegate purchased a five acre parcel of land in Mohawk, Herkimer County from Timothy and Lucy Hess. (Herkimer Co. (NY) Deeds 78-624). On 5 December 1863, she sold the same parcel the Lewis F Appelgate—presumably her son.

In 1865, Elizabeth was enumerated with her younger children in the New York State Census. She was 50 and born in Herkimer County. Living in the household were her children Lewis, Henry, William, Mary, and Sherman M. Her entry indicates she was the mother of eight children, married once, and currently married. I believe the entry of her marital state is in error and she had been a widow since at least 1860.

I cannot find her in the 1870 US Census.

In 1875, Elizabeth was enumerated in the household of her son Henry in Princeton, Mille Lacs Co., MN. She was 56 and born in NY. In 1885, she was enumerated in the household of her son William, also in Princeton. She was 73 and born in NY.

Sometime prior to 1900, Elizabeth returned to Herkimer County, NY. She was enumerated there in the household of her grandson Charles Rulison, the son of her daughter Ellen.

Elizabeth died on 23 January 1904 in Utica, NY. Her obituary, as printed and expanded in the Princeton Union, is attached as an appendix.

APPENDIX
OBITUARY FROM THE PRINCETON UNION

The Princeton Union, February 18, 1904, p. 7

William Applegate received a copy of the Saturday Globe of Utica, N.Y., last week containing an account of the death of his mother at the advanced age of ninety-two years. The account dated Ilion, Jan. 24th says: "At the rare old age of ninety-two Mrs. Elizabeth Applegate breathed her last at the home of her daughter, Mrs. J. V. R. Fretts in South Ilion. For half a century the worthy and respected old lady had been a resident here, her earlier days having been passed with a Quaker family in the near neighborhood of Palmyra. Four children survive her--the daughter named above and three sons, of whom one is residing in the state of Alabama and two in Minnesota. Funeral services were held from the South Ilion church Monday afternoon, Rev. George N. Buel officiating. Interment was made in the Mohawk cemetery. Many are the kind memories which follow her who has laid down her burden of years."

William and Henry Applegate are the two sons residing in Minnesota. T.H. Caley's first wife who died many years ago, was a daughter of Mrs. Applegate who several years ago lived with her children in Princeton. 
Applegate, William Franklyn (I42082)
 
4188 PR1A Ellen Applegate, b. abt 1835 in NY (NY, Herkimer Co., German Flats, 395/423 [age 15, birthplace NY]; d. bef. 1904. She married John Rulison, b. ____; d. _____. Applegate, Ellen (I42084)
 
4189 PR1B William J Applegate, b. Aug 1837 in Oswego Co., NY (1850 US Census, NY, Herkimer Co., German Flats, 395/423 [age 14, birthplace NY]; 1855 NY State Census, Herkimer Co., Litchfield, 165/173 [age 18, birthplace Oswego Co.]; 1860 US Census, NY, Herkimer Co., German Flatts, p. 35, 201/202 [age 23, birthplace NY]; 1865 NY State Census, Herkimer Co., German Flatts, ED 1, p. 75, #637 [age 28, birthplace Herkimer Co.]; 1875 MN State Census, Mille Lacs Co., p. 1074, #76 [age 39, birthplace NY]; 1880 US Census, MN, Hennepin Co., Minneapolis, 2/254, p. 38, 311/394 [age 43, birthplace NY]; 1885 MN State Census, Mille Lacs Co., Princeton, p. 20, #149 [age 48, birthplace NY]; 1900 US Census, MN, Mille Lacs Co., Princeton, 6/248, sheet 11B, 215/222 [August 1837, birthplace NY]; d. 1 Dec 1919 in Princeton, Mille Lacs Co., MN (MN ODM Database available at Familysearch.org). He married (1) Emma Cain, who gave him up for dead in the Civil War. He married (2) abt 1870 (1900 US Census, supra [married 30 years] Harriet Delia Eccleberger, b. Aug 1852 in IN (1875 MS State Census, supra [age 23, birthplace IN]; MN State Census, supra [age 27, birthplace IN]; 1885 MN State Census [age 39, birthplace IN]; 1900 US Census, supra [Aug 1852, birthplace IN]; 1930 US Census, MN, Mille Lacs Co., Princeton, ED 48-23, SD 6, sheet 16A, 338/390 [age 77, birthplace IN]; d. 14 January 1932 at Princeton, Mille Lacs Co., MN (Findagrave Memorial # 96631784); bur. Oak Knoll Cemetery, Princeton, Mille Lacs Co., MN (Id.).

William was enumerated with his parents in Herkimer County in 1850 and 1855. In 1860, he was living in the household of Matthias Cain--his future father-in-law-- in German Flatts near his mother and youngest siblings. He was 23 and a day laborer. Also in the household was his future wife, Emma Cain.

Sometime after this, but before August of 1862 when he joined the 121st NY Infantry, William married his first wife, Emma Cain, and fathered his first two children.

In August 1862, William joined Co. B, 121st NY Infantry. According to a story published in the Princeton Union more than 40 years later, he was captured and held at Libby Prison until the close of the war. Believing him to be dead, his first wife remarried and moved west with her new husband. (Princeton Union, July 14, 1904, p. 1). William moved to New York City, where he worked for a street car company. He was injured in an accident and his wife (who apparently had found out he was still alive) again decided he was dead.

The story may be somewhat embellished. On 6 November 1863, the New York Times published a list of Union officers held in Richmond, VA. William Applegate does not appear on the list. However, L. Applegate, assistant surgeon of the 102d N.Y. Volunteers does appear. This person is William’s younger brother, Lewis.

In 1865, William was enumerated with his mother and several siblings in the 1865 NY State Census in Mohawk, Herkimer Co., NY. He was 28 and born in Herkimer County. This Census—taken only a few months after the end of the civil war—inquired about military service. William had joined the 121st New York Volunteers on 2 August 1862 and served for 34 months. He had, by the time the census was taken in July of 1865, been mustered out. His health was good, but he had an unspecified other wound.

Sometime prior to 1875, he moved to Princeton, Mille Lacs Co., MN with his brother Henry, his sister Mary, and his mother Elizabeth. In 1875 he was enumerated in the Minnesota State Census in Mille Lacs County. William was 39, born in NY; his wife Delia was 23, born in IN; daughter Tillie was 3, born in MN; daughter Ida was 5, born in MN; and son Melvin was less than a year, born in MN. (1875 MN State Census, supra).

In 1880, William and family were enumerated in Minneapolis, Hennepin County, MN on Riverside Avenue. Their home at 206 Riverside Avenue is now the site of a large parking ramp for the University of Minnesota Hospital. William was a laborer, 43, born in NY; Delia was 27, born in IN; Tillie was 8, born in MY; Ida was 10, born in MN; Melvin was 5, born in MN; and Willard was 1, born in MN. (1880 US Census, supra).

By 1885, the family had returned to Princeton, where they were enumerated in the 1885 MN State Census. William’s mother Elizabeth had joined them.

In 1900, William and Delia were enumerated in Princeton with their younger children. William was born in Aug 1837 in NY and was a harness maker; Delia was born in August 1852 in IN; Melvin was bonr in January 1876; Willard was born in May 1880; Marjorie was born in December 1889; Orva was born in May 1892; and Myra was born in May 1894.

In 1904, William’s mother Elizabeth died in Utica, NY. Somehow, William’s son William from his first marriage saw an obituary for her and knew she was his grandmother. He also saw she had two surviving sons living in Princeton and he traveled to Princeton to meet his long-lost father.

William died 1 December 1919 just north of Princeton. His obituary is attached in the Appendix.

APPENDIX
OBITUARY FROM THE PRINCETON UNION

Princeton Union, December 4, 1919, p. 1

William J. Applegate.

William J. Applegate died at his home in North Princeton on Monday at 2 o'clock.

He was born in Mohawk, N. Y., 84 years ago last August. Two sons, Al-bert and William, were born of his first marriage in Mohawk.

When Lincoln called for volunteers the deceased responded and for three years rendered valiant service to preserve the union and free the slaves. He was in some of the fiercest battles and to his deathbed carried a bullet as a souvenir of his war experience. He was a member of the G.A.R. and always enjoyed the fellowship of the old boys. He was optimistic and a ready wit, cordial and polite in manner and active in mind and body to the end of life. Fifty-two years ago he came to Princeton and four years later was married to Miss Harriet Ecclebarger. He is survived by his wife and the following children: Mrs. Ida Coons, Mrs. Frank Guyette, Melvin, Willard, William, Albert, Mrs. Alexander Burke and Mrs. Harry Olson. He also leaves 21 grandchildren and three great grandchildren.

Funeral services were held yesterday afternoon at the Methodist church and a quartet furnished hymnal selections. The interment was at Oak Knoll.

William Applegate was a man who commanded the respect of everyone who knew him.

MEETING OF WILLIAM AND HIS LONG-LOST SON WILLIAM

The Princeton Union, July 14, 1904, p. 1

A JOYFUL MEETING
---
William J. Applegate Meets Son He Had Not Seen Since Breaking Out of Civil War.
---
An Interesting and Romantic Story of a Long Separation and a Happy Meeting.
---
Many an interesting story of romance and adventure has resulted from the civil war, and in their reality have made the most exciting fiction very tame indeed. The fortunes of war have told of many strange separations of families, and of lovers, the partings with many to be forever, while with others after a lapse of many years there have been happy re-unions. One of these romantic chapters that opened with the call to arms at the beginning of the war and closed well nigh forty years later, is that in which William J. Applegate of Princeton and one of his sons figure conspicuously.

In 1862 William J. Applegate enlisted in Company B, 121st N.Y. Infantry at Mohawk, N.Y., and when he donned a soldier's uniform and started to the front he bade an affectionate au revoire to his wife and two little boys one named after his father, but two years of age, while the other was a mere infant.

Mr. Applegate served through the war, but never returned home on a furlough to visit his family. He was taken prisoner and was sent to Libby prison where he remained until the close of the war. It was rumored that he died in that horrible abode of suffering, and his wife not hearing from him mourned him as dead and in time married again and moved west.

After being discharged Mr. Applegate ascertained that his wife had given him up for dead, had married and gone west, and he went to New York and worked for the street railway company. He was injured in an accident and his first wife and his children who it appears in time learned he did not die in the war, had tidings that he met death in the street car accident, and supposed him surely dead.

Thirty years ago he moved to Princeton where he married and started life anew, and has by his second marriage four daughters and two sons. In course of time the babe and the little lad he left with their mother in Mohawk, N.Y., grew to manhood and went out into the wide, wide world to seek their fortune.

Less than a year ago, the mother of William J. Applegate died at a ripe old age in Mohawk, and her death notice appeared in the local paper, as well as papers in Utica, N.Y., and other places. The oldest son of William J. Applegate, who lives in Minneapolis, saw the notice of the death of his grandmother in one of the papers and to her surprise that two of the sons, William and Henry were living in Princeton. He could hardly believe the statement, and for a time put little credence in the story of the obituary notice, but he was not satisfied and concluded to make a visit to Princeton and verify the statement if possible. He arrived on June 28th and begun to make inquiries, and soon found that two sons, William and Henry Applegate lived here. He engaged A.H. Steeves to drive him to the home of William Applegate, and on the way over they met him. Mr. Steeves called to Mr. Applegate and informed him that the man with him in the buggy was looking for him and claimed to be his son. The father was startled at the statement as he had long given his oldest son up for dead, and could not believe that he was looking at his first-born child, but here was a case where "truth is stranger than fiction" and it did not require much comparison of family data to prove that father and son after a separation of nearly forty years were re-united, and here the curtain drops, but it is proper to say that the father and son lived over the long years that had flown and the first meeting was a long one.

The son is married and has a family. He is a painter and paper hanger by trade. He said that he expected when he met his father to see a gray-haired man on crutches, bent over with the infirmities of years, but he was agreeably surprised for though sixty-eight years of age Mr. Applegate does not look to be much over forty. 
Applegate, William J (I42085)
 
4190 PR1B1 William Applegate, b. abt 1860 (Princeton Union 14, 1904, p. 1 [age 2 in 1862]); d. _____.

William discovered his father living in Princeton in 1904. He went by the surname "Cain" later in his life. 
Applegate, William H (I42179)
 
4191 PR1B10 Tedda “Teddie” Applegate, b. 20 Dec 1886; d. 10 May 1887. Applegate, Tedda (I42182)
 
4192 PR1B11 Marjorie LaMay Applegate, b. December 1889 in Minnesota (1900 US Census, MN, Mille Lacs Co., Princeton, 6/248, sheet 11B, 215/222 [December 1889, birthplace MN]; Princeton Union, December 24, 1903, p. 5 [story reporting on her 14th birthday party]); d. _____. By 1906 she was living in Minneapolis (Princeton Union, May 24, 1906, p. 5); by 1908 she was living there and working in the telephone office (Princeton Union, October 15, 1908, p. 5). Applegate, Marjorie LaMay (I42159)
 
4193 PR1B12 Orva Applegate, b. 23 May 1892 in MN (1900 US Census, MN, Mille Lacs Co., Princeton, 6/248, sheet 11B, 215/222 [May 1892, birthplace MN]; 1930 US Census, MN, Mille Lacs Co., Princeton, ED 48-23, SD 6, sheet 16A, 337/389 [age 37, birthplace MN]; 1940 US Census, MN, Mille Lacs Co., Princeton, Block Nos. 64-54, SD 10, ED 48-24B, Sheet 2A [age 46, birthplace MN]; Findagrave Memorial # 97358220); d. 30 January 1950 (Findagrave, supra); bur. Oak Knoll Cemetery, Princeton, Mille Lacs Co., MN (Id.). He married on 26 October 1912 at his parent’s home in Princeton in a double wedding with his sister Myra (Princeton Union, October 31, 1912, p. 1) Irene Thompson, b. abt 1896 in MN (1930 US Census, supra [age 34, birthplace MN]; 1940 US Census, supra [age 44, birthplace MN]); d. 26 Feb 1958; bur. Oak Knoll Cemetery, Princeton. (Findagrave Memorial # 97358271).

In 1930 Orva was enumerated with his wife Irene in Princeton. He was 37, born in MN and a laborer in a warehouse. Irene was 34 and born in MN. Daughter Laverne was 16, born in MN; daughter Carmen was 9, born in MN; son Robert was 8, born in MN; daughter Rebecca was 6, born in MN; daughter Mary was 5, born in MN; son William was 4, born in MN; and son Gordon was 1, born in MN. Orva’s family rented their home. Enumerated next to them was Orva’s widowed mother Delia who owned her home—I suspect she was their landlord. Also on the same sheet a few houses away is Orva’s older brother Willard.

In 1940, Orva was enumerated with his family in Princeton. In the household were his wife Irene and his children Rebecca, Mary, William, Gordon, and Allen. Orva was a laborer in a brickyard.

Orva died on 30 January 1950. He is buried in Oak Knoll Cemetery in Princeton. His wife Irene died on 26 February 1958 and is buried in Oak Knoll with her husband. 
Applegate, Orva (I42160)
 
4194 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Applegate, Laverne (I42172)
 
4195 PR1B12B Infant (Male) Applegate, b. April 1916, d. 27 August 1916 in Princeton, Mille Lacs Co., MN; buried in Oak Knoll Cemetery, Princeton, Mille Lacs Co., MN. (Findagrave Memorial # 103346402). Applegate, ? (I42203)
 
4196 PR1B12C Carmen Darlene Applegate, b. 5 May 1920 in Minnesota (1930 US Census, MN, Mille Lacs Co., Princeton, ED 48-23, SD 6, sheet 16A, 337/389 [age 9, birthplace MN]); d. 27 June 2007; bur. Grandview Memorial Gardents, Rochester, Olmsted County, Minnesota (Findagrave Memorial # 20228002). She married (1) James Dunn; and (2) Henry Lex. Applegate, Carmen Darlene (I42173)
 
4197 PR1B12D Robert Applegate, b. 21 July 1921 in Princeton, Mille Lacs Co., MN (1930 US Census, MN, Mille Lacs Co., Princeton, ED 48-23, SD 6, sheet 16A, 337/389 [age 8, birthplace MN]); d. 3 December 2007 in Princeton; bur. Oak Knoll Cemetery there. (Findagrave Memorial # 100519128). He married Margaret Rosemary Veal, b. 14 July 1923 in Princeton; d. 4 May 2001 in Princeton; bur. Oak Knoll Cemetery there (Findagrave Memorial # Memorial # 100519221) Applegate, Robert (I42174)
 
4198 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Applegate, Rebecca (I42167)
 
4199 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Applegate, Mary Ann (I42168)
 
4200 PR1B12G William Applegate, b. 15 Feb 1926 in Minnesota (1930 US Census, MN, Mille Lacs Co., Princeton, ED 48-23, SD 6, sheet 16A, 337/389 [age 4, birthplace MN]; 1940 US Census, MN, Mille Lacs Co., Princeton, Block Nos. 64-54, SD 10, ED 48-24B, Sheet 2A [age 14, birthplace MN]); d. 10 April 1986; bur. Oak Knoll Cemetery, Princeton, Mille Lacs Co., MN (Findagrave Memorial #100519015). Applegate, William "Bill" (I42169)
 

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