


Winder Wonderland DNA Project
Researching the genealogy of the Winder/Winders/Wynder/etc families.
Notes
Matches 551 to 600 of 3,317
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551 | According to Betty Urena: George Sutherlin (Sutherland) Cline was the son of John Cline (Kline) b: abt 1774 and Mary Ann Sutherland b: abt 1776 of Virginia (her father was George Sutherland of Virginia). George and Mary Ann both died abt 1800 which would have made George only 4 years old. I have no other info on this family, i.e. what happened to George between the 1800 when his parents died and 1813 when he married Tamsey Ann. | CLINE, George Southerland (I23161)
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552 | According to Betty Urena: Their daughter Tamsey Ann Cline b:3/26/1825 in Union Co., Ohio d: 4/6/1910 Married William Harrison McCart 11/09/1842 in Gallantin, Davies Co. Missouri (they had 6 children). Notes written in on the "family tree" copy sent to me by Great Aunt Francis McCart Williams: "(skelton in closet) After the death of William Harrison McCart d: 3/10/1870, Tamsey Ann Cline (McCart) gave birth to Elmer Baxter Early b:1/6/1884 (illegitimate son of Boone Cline). Tamsey Ann married 2nd husband Samuel Early in 1872 divorced about 1884. Note from me: if the birthdate of 1/6/1884 for Elmer Baxter Early is correct that would make Tamsey Ann 59 years old when the boy was born and that doesn't seem likely??? I came across a 21 Feb 2000 posting by "Joan Case", Message #121 in the Genform/Winder page saying "Family tradition says that Tansy (Tamsey) was disowned by her family becuase she married the hired hand. She did not receive property she should have inherited in Maryland because of this. She goes on to say that George and Tansy (Tamsey) had 8 children. ...Tamsey Ann Cline McCart is my Grandfather McCart's Grandmother and he spoke very well of her as being a loving and caring person. You can immagine how surprised I was when I read the "Family Tree" account of her and Boone Cline. The McCart's and several other family's that lived near each other in Kentucky all migrated to Kansas territory at the same time. The McCart's were supposedly neighbors/acquaintances of Daniel Boone's family. | CLINE, Tamsey Ann (I23162)
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553 | According to Bill Johns (1999): I have a copy of his will dated 28 May 1829 and probated 7 March 1831. In his will, he mentions sons James, Daniel and David; daughters, Sarah White, Katharine Laughlin and Elizabeth McGrew; grandchildren, Elizabeth White and James N. White. Philip Grable and Nimrod Grable named executors, witnessed by Salom Grable, Queen Esther Grable and Carhart Grable. This James Winder resided in Redstone, Fayette County, PA. In the "LaFayette" a quarterly covering the History and Genealogy of Fayette County, PA, Volume VII, Number 4, October, 1988, page 3, Will Abstracts, Fayette County, Will Book I, is the abstract of Samuel Crable (Grable) Sr. of Redstone Twp. which mentions among others, daughter, Elizabeth Winders. I picked up a message on the PAFAYETTE-L mailing list in Feb 1998 in which Ellen Kelley posted names from a ledger that was kept by her ancestor, James McCormick, among those names she posted was James Winders. I asked her for more information from the ledger and the following is which she transcribed: "March the 6th 1831 I made one coffin fur the berril of James Winders and took it out and found bords to kiver the volt by order of Walton brown 8.171/2" (this is the amount charged) November the 25th 1831 Recd of Nimrod grayble exacter of Danniel Winders axtate decesed for coffin 8.371/2" (note: axtate is no doubt supposed to be estate). According to Bill Johns (1989): ...WINDER family listed in the Biographical Record of Harrison Co, Ohio, 1891, page 700 and 701. This family were descendants of General James WINDER, b. 1746, d. 1828. He was a Rev. War General. His ch. were Daniel, James, David and Sarah. Daniel WINDER, b. PA, m. Mary Kennedy, b. PA, and are mentioned in the Portrait and Biographical Album of Louisa County, IA, 1889, page 348. Daniel's son, David, was b. Apr 1820, near Freeport, Harrison Co, OH. According to Bill Johns (Aug 1999): The James Winders of Harrison County, OH, I don't believe ever actually resided there. From the book "Historical Collections of Harrison County, in the State of Ohio" by Charles A. Hanna, New York, 1900, privately printed, page 236 lists Harrison County, OH land patents. James Winder, NW 12.11.7, Feb. 10, 1809 and James Winders, Fayette county, Pa., NW 2.12.7, July 1, 1816. The book also mentions a related genealogy and some marriages. From the book "Commemorative Biographical Record Harrison County, Ohio" published by J. H. Beers & Co., Chicago, 1891, page 700 in the biographical sketch of Franklin Gaudy it states "On October 5, 1835, Mr. Gaudy was married to Chilnisse, daughter of Daniel Winder, one of the earliest settlers in this section, and of English descent. James Winder, the father of Daniel Winder, was a general in the Revoluntionary War, and served throughout that glorious contest for liberty. The children born to James Winder were as follows: Daniel, James, David and Sarah. James, the father, died in 1828, aged eighty-two years. Daniel, the eldest son of James Winder, spent much of his early life in Pennsylvania, where he was married to Mary Kennedy, who was of Scotch descent. Mr. and Mrs. Winder early settled on a farm in Freeport Township, Harrison County, Ohio, where Mr. Winder became one of the well-known and successful men of his township." According to Bill Johns (1989): ...WINDER family listed in the Biographical Record of Harrison Co, Ohio, 1891, page 700 and 701. This family were descendants of General James WINDER, b. 1746, d. 1828. He was a Rev. War General. His ch. were Daniel, James, David and Sarah. Daniel WINDER, b. PA, m. Mary Kennedy, b. PA, and are mentioned in the Portrait and Biographical Album of Louisa County, IA, 1889, page 348. Daniel's son, David, was b. Apr 1820, near Freeport, Harrison Co, OH. According to Bob Winder (Jun 2000 on Winder Website) James Winder (ca. 1747-1831) - #22 in "tomsarah.rtf" This morning I went through the Pennsylvania Archives one more time to make sure I had not missed the famous "General" James Winder's record during the Revolution! There is no James Winder listed in Pennsylvania Archives index to Revolutionary War soldiers. There is a James Winner, who served as a private in Capt. August Willet's Middletown Township Company, from Bucks County. He and a Samuel Windon appear on a roll of this company from 21 Aug 1775. There is a James Winter, who is listed with "the men" of Capt. Worsley Emes' Company of artillery, who enlisted for 7 months in 1780. There is a James Winters, who was a private in "The Major's Company" of the New 11th Regiment of the Pennsylvania Line. This soldier is listed as being 28 years old when enlisted, 5'4" tall, occupation silk-dyer; born in England, enl. 5 Apr 1777, and resident of Washington County PA in 1835, when he was 91 years old. It seems fairly certain that James Winder (ca. 1747 -1831) was living in what is now Fayette County by 1776. In that year, if he had been in the Pennsylvania militia, he most likely would have appeared in a Bedford County company. No Winders listed were in units from Bedford County. According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000): James Winder of Redstone Township came into Fayette County, Pa. sometime subsequent to 1768, according to Ellis' History of Fayette County, which is the only source found concerning such date. Ellis specifically mentions James Winder as an early settler of Redstone Township, but beyond that, James is mentioned only as appearing on the account books of William Colvin, a trader at Brownsville, Pa., "subsequent to 1768", and possibly a second time as a charter member of the Big Redstone Baptist Church upon its founding in May of 1790. James Winder's name is also found among the signers of a petition to Congress which originated about 1780 from Southwest Pennsylvania, praying for the establishment of an independent state of "Westsylvania" in that area which was in dispute between Virginia and Pennsylvania. This petition is cited by Howard L. Leckey in his The Ten-Mile Country and Its Pioneer Families. James also appears in the 1790 census records of Fayette County in Menallen Township as a head of household. At that date Menallen Township still included what later became Redstone Township. This census record shows his household consisting of 2 free white males under 16, 2 free white males 16 and over, and three free white females. Census records for 1800, 1810, and 1820 continue to record James Winder as head of household in Redstone Township, Fayette County, Pa. Deed records of Fayette County show that in 1791 James Winder purchased 80 acres of land from George Fought in "Menallen Township", the land being described as part of a larger tract granted to Philip Fought on 4 April 1786. Philip Fought received by patent from Pennsylvania 354.5 acres called "Intention" on 4 April 1786, which tract is located in present Redstone Township, as confirmed by the Pennsylvania Land Office map of original patents granted in Redstone Township. The deed for 80 acres from George Fought to James Winder was received for recording on 28 November 1791 and is entered at page 154, Deed Book B of Fayette County records. Several mentions of James Winder are also found in other records of Fayette County as witness to wills and as a bondsman. The date of James Winder's marriage to Elizabeth Grable, daughter of Samuel Grable, has not been ascertained. James' date of birth has been estimated as 1745-1750, with the most likely year seeming to be 1747. This estimate is partly based on the statement of a great-grandson that James was 82 years old "when he died in 1829". James Winder of Redstone Township, however, wrote his will on 28 May 1829, and the will was not probated until 8 March 1831. In his will James described himself as a "yeoman, far advanced in years". Well before his death he had also acquired two tracts of land in what is now Harrison County, Ohio. Both these tracts of land, bought through the U. S. Land Office at Steubenville, Ohio, were sold by James to his sons, James, Daniel, and David. James' will, the record of land transactions at the Steubenville Land Office, and subsequent deeds recorded in Harrison County, Ohio supply the evidence to identify his three sons as James Winder (1775-1861) of Bloomfield Township, Crawford County, Pa., Daniel Winder of Harrison County, Ohio, and David Winder of Harrison County, Ohio. James' will reads as follows: In the name of God, amen, I, James Winder of the township of Redstone, County of Fayette and Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Yeoman, being far advanced in years and of sound mind and memory thanks be to Almighty God, and calling to mind the uncertainties of this life, do make and ordain this to be my last Will and Testament. First: burial and funeral expenses and all my just debts are to be paid. Second - I give and bequeath unto my son James Winder the sum of $50. Third - I give and bequeath unto my son Daniel Winder the sum of $50. Fourth - Unto my son David Winders I bequeath the sum of $50. Fifth - I give unto my daughter Sarah White the sum of $100. Sixth - I give unto my grandchildren, namely Elizabeth White and James N. White, the sum of $100, divided equally among them. Seventh - I give unto my daughters, Katharine Laughlin, Elizabeth McGrew, and Sara White the residue of my estate to be sold at public sale and the proceeds equally divided among them. Eighth - I appoint my confidential friends Philip Grable and Nimrod Grable to be my executors. Done 28 May 1829 Witnesses: Salome Grable Queen Esther Grable Earhart Grable Proved 8 March 1831 Fayette County, Pa. From all evidence found James Winder appears to have retained his residency in Redstone Township, Fayette County from at least 1780 until his death in 1831. James Winder's 80 acres of land in Redstone Township was sold by deed dated 1 April 1833 by Nimrod Grable, as the administrator of James' estate, to George B. Craft. The deed is recorded in Fayette County Deed Book 26 at page 77, but was not recorded until 22 January 1873. Elizabeth Grable, who married James Winder at an unknown date and place, is known to have been the daughter of Samuel Grable (died 1811 in Fayette County, PA), who was also an early settler of Redstone Township. Samuel Grable is supposed to have been born 17 September 1725 in Germany. Samuel was on the tax rolls in Coventry Township, Chester County, PA in 1751, 1753, and 1754 - in these last two years next to George Craft in the tax lists. Nicholas Grable, whose will was written 16 April 1774 in Frederick County, Maryland, named Samuel Grable as one of his sons. Nicholas Grable appears on the tax lists in Coventry Township, Chester County, as early as 1729 and as late as 1760. In 1764 a Nicholas Grable is recorded as having bought a tract of land in Frederick County, MD known as "Old Barrel". Although Ellis' History of Fayette County states that Samuel Grable emigrated from "the eastern shore of Maryland", the same source identifies George Craft as having been indentured to Samuel Grable in Maryland and states that George Craft had lived in "Maryland, near where the battle of Antietam was fought." This last description is of present-day Washington County, MD, which prior to 1776 was included within Frederick County, MD. So we note that James Winder of Redstone Township, whose origin was most probably in the Antietam valley of Maryland, wedded, if not a native of the Antietam Valley, one who had lived in that area before her family moved to Fayette County. Samuel Grable moved into Redstone Township about 1780 and located a tract of land known as "Maiden's Bower", for which he received a warrant on 17 March 1785 and had the same surveyed on 4 April 1785. The patent for this tract was issued to George Cuff on 30 September 1785. There has been speculation that Samuel Grable lived on his tract of "Maiden's Bower" during his later life, but this has not been conclusively shown. A Joseph Graybill received a patent for a 295-acre tract called "Clover Pasture", lying partly in Redstone Township and partly in Brownsville Township, on 26 June 1788. A Joseph Grable, Jr. was the patentee on 3 June 1788 of a tract known as "Greenfield" in Redstone Township. The relationship, if any, of these two Joseph Grables to Samuel Grable is not known. The will of Samuel Crable (sic) is recorded in Fayette County, PA. The will was written 12 September 1809 and was probated in September 1811. Samuel Crable's will made bequests to: "the two children of my daughter Catherine Several the sum of $60 each" "my daughter Elizabeth Winders the sum of $230" "my son David Crable the sum of $320" "son Samuel Grable $300" "daughter Susannah Wells $230" "daughter Mary Colvin $230 and one cow" "daughter Hannah Ratcliff $230 and use of my plantation for two years after my decease, rent free" "my son Philip Grable $300" "my daughter Sarah Studebaker $230" Philip Grable and John Fulton were named as executors of the will. Witnesses were Hugh Shotwell, Rosattah Shotwell, and Susanna Shotwell. Sons Philip and Samuel Grable mentioned in the above will have been tentatively identified as the Philip and Samuel Grable whose grave markers are recorded in 1930 in the Grable Burying Ground, located "on the Sumey farm in Centre District, Redstone Township, near Canfield's Rocks". Samuel Grable died 23 April 1848, at age 86, and Philip Grable died 3 May 1837 at age 63 years. This same cemetery contained ( in 1930) markers for : Nancy Grable, "consort of Philip Grable, who departed this life July 9th, 1850 in the 76th year of her age" Margaret Grable, "wife of S. Grable, died 2 Oct 1850 aged 77 years and 7 months" Frances Marion Grable, child of Earhart & Nancy Grable Emma Jane Grable, child of Earhart & Nancy Grable | WINDER, James (I431)
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554 | According to Bill Johns: 1830 census of Muskingum County, Ohio lists a Jacob WINDER as head of household with 1 male age 40-50, and 1 female age 20-30. In the annual report of the Secretary of State to the Governor of Ohio -- Appendix B, return of the number of Deaf and Dumb, Blind, Insane and Idiotic Persons for 1856 lists a Margaret WINDER in the County Infirmary as insane giving her age as 50 years, being a white female having been born in PA. 1830 Federal Census, Wayne Twp, Muskingum Co, OH pg 293 1 male 40-50 (1780-1790) 1 fem 20-30 (1800-1810) ? | WINDER, Jacob (I5204)
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555 | According to Bill Wallace: They started adding the "s" to Winder around the time my grandfather was born. The Winder family always said they were from Bucks Co, PA, in fact James Clinton and another child listed place of birth as PA. There was another group of Winder's in Livingston-Crittendon Co, they did not connect to my PA bunch. Died: September 23, 1958 Age: 84 Place: Crittenden County, Kentucky Volume: 038 Certificate: 18892 Death Volume: 58 From: Maria Pfeifer Sent: Saturday, September 01, 2001 10:14 PM I am of the Winder/Winders line. Rose Ella Dalton was born Oct. 26,1877 in Livingston, Ky. She was married to Marcus Lafayette Winders who was born May 24,1874. They had 4 children: Admiral Dewey, Pearl Mildred, Wilbur Dell, & George Dukie. Wilbur Dell Winders is my grandfather & he married Marguerite Elise Hoggard. They had 1 child, Wilbur Dell Winders Jr. I do have more if your interested, along with pictures, a couple of death certificates, and the original marriage certificate for Wilbur & Marguerite along with the divorce paper. There are also a couple of stories. I also have contact with another of Rose & Marcus's decendants. You can e-mail me at dell924@att.net. Maria D. Pfeifer | WINDERS, Marcus Lafayette (I16473)
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556 | According to Brenna Moore texasflower124@yahoo.com, May 2002: Tabitha Stewart Phillips-born Aug. 16, 1854 died 1895 Crittenden Co. KY. Spouse-Philip T. Winders,son of Timothy Winders and Orphy Marvel. Marriage date- April 28, 1874. | PHILIPS, Tabitha Stewart (I20580)
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557 | According to Bruce Pottorff (jan 2000): The names and birth dates of the children also came from the EAQG and from the will of Adah (Winder) Beck in Wabash County, IN. I think all the children except Sylvester were born in Columbiana County, Ohio. Sylvester was born in Harrison County, Ohio. I haven't yet determined when John and Adah moved to Harrison County. The dates and places of death of John and Adah came from, Obituaries in Wabash Co., IN. abstracted by Ronald L. Woodward. The EAQG lists the parents of William and Adah (Bradford) Winder. In a Bradfield genealogy I found Adah's mother's maiden name was Bradfield as was her father's. I have no documentation of that, yet, but it looks very authentic. The marriage was performed by Jabez Coulson JP | Family: John BECK / Adah WINDER (F1311)
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558 | According to Catherine Thacker: I think a Generation is missing in some people's research, James and Anne married 1782, and children were not born until ca 1802 and after. 1784-1786 census has 1male 16 to 60,3 females, Kenan's District. Page 192 Duplin Co.,NC 1790 census has 1 male 16 & upwards 1 male under 16, 6 females, 1 slave. Had a Gen Chart all along from LDS, a Mr Wallace Reed Draughon of Chapel Hill N.C. some of the dates i have from his chart. Notes from Johnny Walker: State Census of North Carolina, 1784-1786, James Winders, 1 male aged 16-60, 3 females, Kenan's District. 1790 Census, Duplin Co., N.C., James Winders, 1 male >16, 1 male <16, 6 females, 1 slave. Duplin Co., N.C. Deeds, p. 146, Curling Smith to James Winders, 20 Jul 1795 for 35 lbs, 52 acres ... mentions Smith, James Ward, Thomas Hooks. Witnesses: C. Hooks, Kitty Hooks. July Court, 1795. Duplin Co., N.C. Deeds, p. 430, Thomas Hooks to James Winders, 10 Sep 1796, 75 lbs, 108 acres... mentions Charles Hooks, Thomas Hooks, Henry Cannon, John Southerland. Witnesses: Charles Hooks, Susannah Hooks. January Court, 1797. Duplin Co., N.C. Deed Book 4A, p. 169, Felix K. Hill of Sampson County to James Winders of Duplin County, 1 Feb 1810, for $10, 10 acres on south side of Goshen Swamp, mentions John Ward, Mrs. Gregory. Witnesses: Charles Hooks, Ann Hooks. July Court, 1810. | WINDERS, James (I13540)
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559 | According to DAR Lineage Books, Henry Handy served as ensign in Salisbury battery, Somerset County militia. He was born in Somerset County. | HANDY, Henry Dashiel (I3025)
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560 | According to DAR records, had 8 children. | WINDER, Joseph (I259)
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561 | According to DAR records, Joseph was only child to marry. According to Winders of America: On Seventh month 4, 1781, Thomas and Moses Winder were dealt with by Falls Monthly Meeting for "having paid several fines for not associating to learn the Art of War and going out as soldiers." As they were not prepared to make the required acknowledgment at the next Monthly Meeting, the cases were carried over. Thomas Winder acknowledged his "wrong-doing", Twelfth month 5, 1781, which acknowledgment the meeting accepted. According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000): Thomas Winder, born 25 February 1733, died 16 December 1785, who married Elizabeth Linton, daughter of Joseph and Mary Blackshaw Linton of Northampton Township on 11 May 1758. Mary Blackshaw was a daughter of Nehemiah Blackshaw (ca. 1675-ca,1744) and his first wife, Elizabeth Bye. Elizabeth Linton Winder died 24 September 1795. The will of Thomas Winder is recorded in Bucks County, PA, written in December of 1785 and proved on 12 Jan 1786. This will shows that Thomas had a wife Elizabeth, sons Joseph and Thomas, and daughters Mary and Rebecca. Son Joseph, according to Records of the Falls Meeting of the Friends Society, married Ruth Buckman on 12 April 1792. Winders of America evidently is incorrect in stating that James Winder, "the only known child of Thomas and Elizabeth Linton Winder", married Ruth Buckman. No children of this marriage are known. Ruth Buckman (1755-1846) was a descendant of Edward Buckman, a "proved" arrival aboard the Welcome in 1682, according to George E. McCracken's The Welcome Claimants, Proved, Disproved, and Doubtful, published in 1985 by the Welcome Society of Pennsylvania. | WINDER, Thomas (I257)
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562 | According to daughter, Karne Pennino: My father was an artist. He worked in oils doing landscapes. I thought he was very good. My father moved to Chicago, Ill and married and lived there until his death. | WINDER, Thomas Ross (I20623)
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563 | According to Deven Lewis (Dec 2013): She didn't leave a will and by the time her meager debts were paid, there was only about $1.00 left, so no distribution was made, thus no naming of children. (George had to have died sometime in the 1830s, but I found no will or estate records)... the piece that seemed to be most useful is attached, because it names who held notes against the estate. Notice that a Samuel C. Kinsey held a note, as did Samuel Funk (2 notes) and a Joseph Eavey. | BURNS, Jane (I18448)
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564 | According to Deven Lewis (May 2013): «b»Elizabeth Winders Colley«/b» (born Apr. 6, 1810 in KY, died in Lincoln, Grundy County, MO in 26 Mar 1892). Elizabeth married Peter Colley (born Jan 1808, died 6 Oct. 1879) in Fayette CO., PA, on Jan. 1, 1830. Elizabeth and Peter share the same headstone in the South Evans Cemetery, Lincoln, Grundy County, MO. Elizabeth and Peter were tracked through census records through 1880; they lived in Guernsey Co., OH in 1850-1860, moved to Trenton, Grundy County, MO by 1870, where they are enumerated in the census. In the 1880 census, Elizabeth was found in Lincoln, Grundy Co., MO, widowed, and living with son Aaron. Children of Elizabeth and Peter were: Elihu, Arabella, David, Samuel, William, Aaron, and Mary E. Peter's grandfather, Peter Colley, lived and died in Redstone Township, Fayette Co., PA \endash will recorded Mar 30, 1838 - and was married to Hannah Craft, whose parents are said to have been George Craft and "Elizabeth" Grable of Redstone Township; we know our Elizabeth Grable Winder's parents were Samuel Grable and Hannah Earhart, so we have a conflict of "Elizabeth" Grables. Per Robert's manuscript, a George Kroft/Kraft/Craft was indentured to Samuel Grable, Elizabeth's father (I have found «a href=" http://elements.fay-west.com/pdf/fayette/40.pd"»supporting data«/a»). Two of the Craft daughters married Hibbs men who may have a connection to Ruth Hibbs who married James and Elizabeth Grable Winder's grandson, Samuel Winder (son of Daniel Winder and Mary Kennedy) in Hancock Co., OH in 1830 and later moved to Wapello, Louisa Co., Iowa. | WINDERS, Elizabeth (I23811)
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565 | According to Deven Lewis (May 2013): «b»John Winders«/b» (John «u»B«/u». Winders born Apr 1815 in KY, died Mar 18, 1873 in Brownsville, Fayette Co., PA). No record has been found for a marriage of John to wife, Caroline, who appears in the census records. John was identified as a "plasterer" in successive tax records and census records for Fayette beginning in 1839; John was found in the 1840 census, Redstone Township, Fayette Co, with a male child under 5, who would be son David C. Winders who died in Milwaukee in 1919. This John Winders appears to be the only John in Fayette, born KY, at the time who could reasonably have been the John appointed guardian to Robert Jackaway Winders \endash possible half brother - in Fayette County, PA in 1836: «i»Sept. 1836:«/i» «i»Winders, Samuel, Decd On the petition of Robert J. Winders, son of Samuel Winders late of Uniontown, deceased, setting forth that he is a minor above the age of fourteen years, and therefore praying the court to admist. (?) him to make choice of a guardian, the petition being admitted choses and the court appoint John Winders guardian of the said minor.«/i» | WINDER, John B. (I312)
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566 | According to Deven Lewis (May 2013): «b»Marsham Winder («/b»born c. 1790-1800 per the 1830 census for Harrison Co., IN; died c. 1833). In the 1830 census, Marsham was single, no children, lived in Heath/Heth Township. His estate was probated in Harrison County, IN; partition of the estate for sale of real property occurred in 1842 and names the 8 heirs. [We have assumed the heirs to be siblings of Marsham and are recorded here as children of "Hypothetical Winders" to keep them grouped together in the database. AW] | WINDER, Marsham (I6095)
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567 | According to Deven Lewis (May 2013): «b»Polly Mary Winders Dunlap («/b»born 1812 in KY, died in Trenton, Grundy County, MO, Nov 6, 1900). Mary married James Dunlap (born Dec 18, 1800, PA) c. 1835, however no marriage record could be found for Mary and James. They can be found in the 1840 and 1850 census in Flushing, Belmont Co., OH; in 1850 James is noted as being born in PA in 1810. The family is enumerated on the same page as the households of a Hugh Dunlap and a Samuel Dunlap. Children with Mary and James in 1850 are: Margaret, Rebecca, Susanah, Samuel, Eliza and William. They are still in Flushing in 1860, with Mary's birthplace/year noted as Kentucky, 1815, and child James has been added. Sometime between 1860 and 1865, Mary and James moved to Trenton, Grundy County, MO, where James died on Nov. 2, 1865 \endash he and Mary are both buried in the Old City Cemetery in Trenton. Mary is enumerated in the 1870 census in Trenton with children Rebecca, Samuel, William, Mary, and James. In the 1880 census, she is still living in Trenton and is noted as "widowed"'; in the 1900 census, son William is still living with her in Trenton. The census record states she was age 88, born KY, July 1811, mother of 8 children, 5 still living, father born PA, mother born KY. That Mary and James had been married in Fayette County, PA, is purely conjecture and based largely on James having claimed to be born in PA and the probability of Mary having married in Fayette as did sister, Elizabeth, brother Samuel and brother John. A number of James Dunlaps can be found in Fayette County, PA in the 1830 census. A probable scenario is that James was in the household of Samuel Dunlap in Germantown, Fayette Co., in the 1830 census; two men in the correct age range to be James are in the household, and a Samuel Dunlap is found on the same page as James in the 1850 census for Flushing, Belmont Co., OH. Mary's brother, Samuel Winders, had married and was living in Germantown, possibly being the connection to the Dunlaps of the 1830 Germantown census. | WINDERS, Mary (I23809)
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568 | According to Deven Lewis (May 2013): «b»Samuel Winders«/b» (born Aug. 7, 1802 in KY, died in Fayette Co., PA in 1855). Samuel was married to Margaret Burnside 04 Mar 1827 in Fayette Co., PA; they lived in Masontown (formerly known as Germantown). Children of Samuel and Margaret are believed to be Rebecca Jane, who married John Ross in Fayette Co., PA 10 Feb 1848, and Josiah M., who died in the Mexican-American War. «i»Death Register, Fayette Co., 1852, part 2 Winders Samuel, white, male, 52y 5m 3d farmer Father: Samuel «/i» «i»Mother: Rebecca B: Bullitt Co. Ky, 8-7-1802 d. 1-10-1855 Masontown, Pa. of Inflammation of brain, C.P. Ch. Buril nr Masontown Wife: Margaret «/i» «i»G. W. Neff. M.D.«/i» | WINDERS, Samuel (I6689)
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569 | According to Deven Lewis (May 2013): «i»Samuel and Margaret's son was the Josiah M. WINDERS who died a hero fighting in the Mexican-American War. His is the subject of that sad account in the Fayette Co PA History about the young man of Mason Town age 19 who took a bullet in his gut exploding his innards as he crossed the road storming the gates that led his regiment to victory in Mexico City. He was one of 16 who volunteered on what was a suicide mission, called by the asking Officer something like the "Forlorn Hope". His body was returned to his family in Fayette Co and was buried but later re-interred at the Presby Church cemetery (the one Samuel was very active in.) He is the one whose letter to (Alexander/Andrew?) SCOTT of Fayette Co PA was published in several historical accounts, in which he described one battle he fought in and also mentioned the admirable qualities and respect he had for Gen'l Winfield SCOTT. I know this Josiah M. WINDERS was the son of Samuel WINDERS because of the land record in which Samuel WINDERS, "Father" and "heir at law of Josiah M WINDERS" sold Josiah's land warrant (for his military service) in 1852/53. His age 19 given in the historical accounts of his having died, fit perfectly as the male child in the 1830 and 1840 censuses. Given that purported sister Rebecca Jane was born 1826, he was therefore, born between 1826 and 1830 to have been "under 5" in the 1830 census. «/i» | WINDERS, Josiah M. (I23849)
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570 | According to Deven Lewis (My 2013): «b»Cordelia Winders«/b» (born 1801 in KY, died before 1860). Cordelia married William Trotter on 05 Apr 1824 in Harrison County, IN. William Trotter can be found in the 1840 census in Heath/Heth Township, Harrison County, IN, and William and Cordelia are enumerated in 1850 in District 45, Harrison County, IN, with children Hamilton, William, Elizabeth, Ann, Lafayett, and Cordelia. It appears that by the 1860 census, both Cordelia and William had died; 16-year old Cordelia Trotter and 24-year old Elizabeth Trotter are enumerated in the household of Thomas G. and Ann Ballard in Heath/Heth Township, Harrison County, IN, probably Ann being the sister of Cordelia and Elizabeth. | WINDERS, Cordelia (I6098)
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571 | According to Dorinda Shepley: WINDER WILL - WASHINGTON CO, MD JAMES WINDER, A, 212-213 Written 15 Mar 1785, rec 15 Aug 1789 w/Elizabeth ch/Daniel Mary M. Cown (or McCown?) Susana Oar Mary Darlling [Should be Mercy Darling...AW] Rachel Subley/Snelely Elizabeth Bond Thomas James John Alexander Isaac George According to Robert L. Winder (June 2000): I have a comment on the death date of James Winder, of Washington Co, MD: His will was written in 1785, therefore my opinion is that the tombstone inscription in Funkstown Cemetery was misrecorded as 1782. Probate was not until 1789. I find it hard to believe that James would have died prior to 1789, as probate of the will would not reasonably have been delayed until 1789. When I searched the Funkstown cemetery, there were no inscriptions before 1800 that were legible, and James Winder's stone seemed to have disappeared. According to Robert L. Winder (Sep 2000): James Winder, birthdate unknown, son of Thomas Winder and Sara Bull Winder, moved to Prince Georges County, Maryland sometime prior to 1743. On 9 May 1743 James Winder and Elizabeth Sherwood were married at All Saints' Parish, located in Frederick, Maryland. At that time All Saints' Parish was the Anglican parish for all of Frederick County, which then included not only present-day Frederick County, but also the present counties of Washington, Garrett, Alleghany, and Carroll in Maryland. It is to be understood that, although James Winder "of Washington County" apparently resided in the same physical location from about 1752 until his death in 1789, this location had been in Prince Georges County until about 1743, then in Frederick County until 1776, then finally in Washington County from 1776 until the present. Land records in Maryland show that James Winder, by deed dated 18 January 1752, bought a hundred-acre tract known as Medcalf's Meadow, located in Frederick County, from a James Perry. Both parties to the deed were described as "of Frederick County, Maryland". This tract was described as being in "Calverton or Conogochegue Manner", and the physical description of Medcalf's Meadow starts: "Beginning at a bounded White Oak standing by the side of a little spring within half a mile of the Waggon Road that goes from Stulls Mill to the Mountains…". Stulls Mill was located on Antietam Creek, just shortly to the east of present-day Hagerstown, Maryland On 7 March 1759 James Winder also received by patent 48 acres of land in a tract known as Boys Harbour, which he sold on 5 Nov 1763. The description of Boys Harbour starts: "Beginning at a bounded white oak standing about half a mile above Stulls Mill on the NorthWest side of the Antietam…". From these descriptions it is seen that James Winder's lands in Maryland were in the upper Antietam Valley, not far eastward from Hagerstown, Maryland. Land records further show that James Winder returned a "Resurvey" of Medcalf's Meadow, by which he added some 112 acres of vacant land that were contiguous with the original survey. Apparently this resurvey action of 1763 did not result in a prompt "Resurvey Grant", as the Maryland Land Office issued a "Grant of Reconfirmation" for the entire 212-acre "Resurvey of Medcalf's Meadow" only on 12 December 1782. James Winder of Washington County, Maryland wrote his will on 15 March 1785, and it was proved in Washington County on 15 August 1789. A tombstone inscription has been reported from Funkstown Cemetery, Maryland supposedly reading James Winder, died 4 July 1782. It seems possible that this tombstone may be for our James Winder who died in 1789, with the last digit of the year being mis-copied. A check of the Funkstown Cemetery in January 1988 found no stones prior to 1800 that had legible inscriptions. James Winder lived quite close to Funkstown, and land records show that he and his sons bought and sold lots in Funkstown, which was originally known as Jerusalemtown. James Winder's will named as legatees his wife Elizabeth, his daughters Mary McCown, Susanna Ore, Mercy Darlling, Rachel Snebely, and Elizabeth Bond; and his sons Thomas Winder, James Winder, John Winder, Daniel Winder, Alexander Winder, Isaac Winder, and George Winder. The will set forth a complicated scheme of paying specific bequests to his children, apparently in order of their age, as well as a complex procedure for evaluating his plantation and setting up the sale of the land to his sons, any one or in combination, by their mother, who was to be allowed to remain on the plantation in any case. The will further specified a time limit of five years after James' death for the completion of the appraisal and sale action. The appraisal appears not to have been made by the time limit of the will, as the widow, Elizabeth, sold a portion of the land in 1794. Sons Daniel and John were named to dispose of the land in the event of the failure of the appraisal and sale scheme set forth in the will - but, in 1795 son Daniel also died. The title to the land was not then settled until 1804, when the heirs of James Winder brought suit in the Maryland Court of Chancery for settlement of the title. With the agreement of the surviving heirs, the title was then settled on one John Winder who was probably the grandson of James Winder who died in 1789. The tracing of descendants of James Winder in Washington County, MD is obfuscated, not by the lack of records, but by a general confusion in the probate and land records there of the names Winder and Winter, a German immigrant named Winter having settled near Hagerstown. The records of Washington County interchange Winder and Winter quite indiscriminately, with a resultant confusion that prevents certainty in many identifications. | WINDER, James (I416)
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572 | According to draft registration: short, slender build, brown eyes, black hair. | WINDER, Percy St Clair (I22832)
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573 | According to draft registration: tall, medium build, gray eyes, dark hair | WINDER, Harry H. (I22818)
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574 | According to draft registration: tall, slender build, blue eyes, brown hair. | WINDER, John Harris (I22847)
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575 | According to federal census. | WINDER, John Carrol (I11757)
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576 | According to Glynnes Lanthier: Am looking for a James W (possibly William) Winder who was possibly born in McMinn Co., TN. In any case, he spent most of his life in Tennessee, McMinn and Monroe counties. He married a Tabitha Angeline Lunsford in 1867. Somewhere before 1900, he changed his name from Winder to Wiseman. All his children appear to have gone by the name Wiseman. His mother's name was Mary Carnes, his father's name is unknown, presumed dead or missing when he was young. I am curious to know about his siblings, none of whom appear to have changed their names. Does anyone know the story behind this? I would presume if he had committed a crime, he would not only have changed his name, but fled the area, which he did not do. 1870 Madison Co NC census James W Winder age 24 occupation Farm Laborer b. TN Tobitha age 18 occupation Keeping house b. TN Margaret age 1 b. TN NOTE by Glynnes Lanthier: on 1870 census, James & Tabitha are living next to Lunsfords, although not her parents, must be cousins, lots of Lunsfords in Madison Co NC 1880 Monroe Co TN James Winder age 35 occupation Laborer, b. TN Tobitha age 29 occupation Keeping House b. TN Maggie age 11 b. TN Henry age 9 b. TN Jacob age 7 b. TN Pearce W age 4 b. TN Callie age 1 b. TN From: Sent: Sunday, April 21, 2002 12:42 PM [snip] James was my gr gr grandfather. The Mary Winder "Stray" listed in McMinn county was his mother. She was listed on the census with James, Jacob and Martha. Mary's maiden name was Carnes. James and Jacob were in the Civil War. At this point in time I don't know who James' father was. [snip] | WINDER, James W. (I17755)
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577 | According to granddaughter, Karen Pennino: My grandparents lived in Ord, Neb. most of their married lives. My father and his sisters were born there. | WINDER, Oliver Calvin (I14831)
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578 | According to John H Winder (2014): «u»John Winders «/u» (b. about 1825-died 1900), who married «u»Lydia Ann Shoop «/u» (1830-1899) on 27 Dec 1848 in Washington County, MD), prepared to move west with his family of 8 sons and 3 daughters (one son, John, died in infancy in 1857, and one daughter, Carrie, was born after the move) by selling his farming implements and livestock in a public sale held at his residence on the road from Witmer's Store on Beaver Creek to Smoketown (just southeast of present day Hagerstown, MD) on 22 February 1869. Items listed in the sale bill (as advertised in the Hagerstown «i»Herald and Torch Light«/i») included 20 horses, 20 head of cattle, 40 sheep, numerous hogs, 70 acres of land in grain and implements commonly associated with a farming operation of such scope (plows, harrows, blacksmith tools, wagons, etc). Evidently, all went well at the sale, because by the time of the 1870 census, John and Lydia and their five younger children (except for Edward) were living in Polo (family #304, enumerated on 11 Jun 1870), while the older kids (plus Edward, who was only 2) were living in the household of a John and Mrs. Sullivan (family #334, enumerated on 12 June), also in Polo. By 1880, the family had moved to Pine Creek Township, just south of Mount Morris and east of Polo. John Winders' date of death is unknown, as is that of Lydia (Shoop) Winders, his wife. The last information about John is in the 1900 census when, widowed, he was living in Dixon, Illinois (just south of Pine Creek Township, across the Ogle County line in Lee County) with his youngest son Edward, and another son, Charles, living next door. This means that Lydia died sometime before 1900, but our latest information about her is from the 1880 census, when the family was living in Pine Creek township. John worked as a farmer all his life, both in Washington County, MD and in Ogle County, IL, but interestingly in the 1870 census he was listed as a 'horse doctor', and in the 1900 census, after he had retired from farming life and was living in the town of Dixon with his son (a grocery salesman), he was listed as a 'veterinary surgeon.' | WINDERS, John (I24075)
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579 | According to John H Winder: «b» «u»Blanche Maud Winders «/u»«/b» was born in November of 1877 in Tama County, Iowa. She grew up there and taught school in Toledo, Iowa until she married Frank D. Miller (1879-1927) on 26 October 1904. The couple moved to Fort Dodge, Iowa. Dates of the couple's deaths are not known. They had two daughters: «b»Margaret Miller«/b» (b. about 1905 in Iowa, no further information) and «b»Leah Blanche Miller«/b» (b. 23 Dec 1906 in Fort Dodge, Iowa, attended the University of Iowa in Iowa City and worked as a stenographer in Cedar Rapids, according to the 1930 census. (No further information). | WINDERS, Blanch Maude (I22072)
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580 | According to John H Winder: «b» «u»Jacob O. Winders «/u»«/b» (1851-1939) was born in Washington County, Maryland, the second son of John and Lydia Ann (Shoop) Winder, in January 1851. He moved with this parents and his siblings to around Polo, Illinois (in Ogle County), probably in the summer of 1869. By the summer of 1870, he, along with all the other members of the family, was enumerated as a resident of Ogle County; as a matter of fact, in Jacob's case, he was counted there twice: once in June as a farm laborer in the household of John and Mrs. Sullivan (along with several of his siblings) and in July as a farm hand in the household of John H. Stuff in Buffalo Township, Ogle County. He married «u»Parmelia 'Minnie' L. Hildebrand «/u» (daughter of Simon and Ann Amelia Gantz Hildebrand) in Ogle County, Illinois on 10 January 1877. The Hildebrands had migrated to Ogle County from Washington County about 1856. In the 1880 census, Jacob Winders was farming in Pine Creek township, Ogle County, Illinois, but by 1885 he and Minnie had moved to a farm near Deep River, in the southeast corner of Poweshiek County, Iowa. By the time of the 1910 census, Jacob and Millie had moved into the town of Deep River and were living on Church Street; Jacob was listed as a carpenter, a trade he continued to ply at least through the 1930 census, when he was listed as a 'carpenter, building houses'. Jacob died in 1939 and Minnie died in 1932; they are both buried in Goldenrod Cemetery, off School Street, on the east side of Deep River, Iowa. | WINDERS, Jacob O. (I24078)
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581 | According to John H Winder: «b» «u»Sarah Alice Winders «/u»«/b» (1852-unk) was the oldest daughter of John and Lydia Shoop Winders, born 26 Jun 1852 in Washington County, Maryland. Like Jacob Winders, she was enumerated twice in the 1870 census, once in the household of John and Mrs. Sullivan in the city of Polo, Ogle County on 12 June; and once in the household of John Ganty, a 63 year old farmer in Pine Creek Township, Ogle County, on 10 September. Shortly thereafter (29 Feb 1872), she married «u»Benjamin Kauffman «/u» (1840-1925), son of John and Magdalena Martha Seachrist of South Middleton Township (Boiling Springs area), Cumberland County, PA. They had one daughter, «u»Ida K. Kauffman «/u» (1875-1943) who grew up in Ogle County, married Oliver G. Strock (1872-1934) in Ogle County, and died and was buried in Fairmount Cemetery in Polo. Ida and Oliver Strock had a son, Reeve Orno Strock (1900-1973), who married Catherine Barnhizer (1901-1977) and moved to New York City and became a sound director in the movie business there. | WINDERS, Sarah Alice (I24079)
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582 | According to John H Winder: «b»Ethel Irene Winders «/b»[25310] was born in Tama, Iowa on 28 July 1896 and married Oscar D. Hart in LeMars, Iowa (Plymouth County) on 10 September 1919. Oscar had served in the Army during World War I and been a farmer before their marriage, and the couple farmed in Plymouth County during the 1930s; by the time of the 1940 census, they were living in LeMars itself (214 Central Ave SE) and Oscar was working at the Elks Club and Ethel was an Executive Director of the Red Cross. According to her obituary, she was the Plymouth County Red Cross director for 20 years, including the World War II years. She also served on the LeMars Library Board for 34 years. Ethel died on 4 January 1980, Oscar on 16 August 1983. They are both buried in the LeMars City/Memorial Cemetery. The couple had two sons: «b»Claude Eugene "Jack" Hart«/b» (b. 4 Jul 1920 in LeMars, Iowa, served as a private in the US Army during WW II, moved to California and died 4 Jul 2000, no information regarding spouse or children); and «b»Larry Glenn Hart«/b» was born 6 December 1932 in Los Angeles, raised in Le Mars, Iowa after his parents returned there from a brief stay in California, earned B.S. and Ph.D. in pharmacology from University of Iowa, was a senior researcher at National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences/National Toxicology Program and adjunct assistant professor of pharmacology at UNC/Chapel Hill, retired in 1999 and died 22 October 2012. Larry was married to Martha (LNU) and they have three children. | WINDERS, Ethel Irene (I25310)
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583 | According to John H Winder: «b»Ray L. Winders Jr.«/b» was born in Marshalltown (Marshall Co), Iowa on 28 March 1920, grew up there and went to the University of Iowa in Iowa City. In about 1945 he married Mary Ann Kurtz, a fellow University of Iowa graduate. Ray worked for Goodyear Tire and Rubber, including a three-year tour in Brussels, Belgium (1963-1966). In 1966, they returned to the States and settled in Hudson, Ohio, where they remained for the rest of their lives. Ray died in January of 1984 and Mary Ann died 15 December 2011. They had two children. | WINDERS, Ray L (I27253)
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584 | According to John H Winder: «b»Robert R. Winders«/b» b. 10 Jul 1920, m. Norma Ruth Weller in May 1947 in Adair County, Iowa, worked for Soil Conservation Service, had one son Gregory who pre-deceased him, d. 25 Aug 2009. | WINDERS, Robert R (I27239)
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585 | According to John H Winder: «u»«b»Anna Karlene Winders «/u»«/b» was born in Montour, Tama County, Iowa on 10 February 1910, attended Coe College for a year in 1929 and the next year married «u»Kenneth L. Puffer «/u» (29 May 1930) in Tama County, Iowa. He was an engineer and worked for a time in Marshalltown, before moving to Houston, Texas in the mid-1920s.The couple lived the rest of their lives there. Kenneth died on 31 March 1988 and Anna on 3 March 2004. They are both buried at Forest Park Westheimer Cemetery in Houston. They had no children. | WINDERS, Anna Karelene (I25276)
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586 | According to John H Winder: «u»«b»Annabel(le) I. Winders «/u»«/b» (1907-1998) was born 2 Jul 1907 in Polo, Illinois and grew up there. The 1940 census enumerated her as a 32-year old single lady living with her parents and working as a clerk in a clothing store. According to the Dixon (Illinois) «i»Evening Telegraph«/i» of 19 May 1955, a marriage license had been issued to George A. Kopp, 48, of Mt. Carroll and Annabel Winders of Polo; however, there is no confirmation that the marriage ever took place, and both the Florida Death Index and the Social Security Death Index list Annabelle under her maiden name. She died 22 Feb 1998 in Hudson, Florida. | WINDERS, Annabelle I (I25470)
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587 | According to John H Winder: «u»«b»Basil B. Winders «/u»«/b» was born 23 December 1893 in Highland Township, Tama County, Iowa , grew up there, and married Gladys H. Kellogg on 2 Aug 1916 in Tama County. The couple farmed in the area of Tama, Iowa until 1945, when they retired and moved to Montour. Basil died in Montour on 26 February 1978; Gladys survived him and lived until 3 November 1996. The couple had three daughters. | WINDERS, Basil B (I25271)
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588 | According to John H Winder: «u»«b»Bayard Leo Winders, Sr. «/u»«/b» was born 20 Jun 1888 in Philadelphia, grew up there and married «u»Gertrude Macy Black «/u» (1892-1981) in 1911. He worked at various jobs ("manager, talking machine" in the 1920 census, salesman in 1930) and ended up working for J.G. Brill Company, a Philadelphia company that produced railroad and trolley cars and buses. He died in November 1971 in Philadelphia and Gertrude died in April 1982 in Newtown Square (probably at their son Bayard L Winder Jr's house). They are both buried in the Arlington Cemetery in Drexel Hills, PA. | WINDERS, Bayard Leo (I23007)
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589 | According to John H Winder: «u»«b»Bayard Taylor Winders «/u»«/b» was born October 1857 in Dubuque County, Iowa but grew up in Mount Morris, Illinois. Eventually he ended up in Philadelphia (the city directory first lists him there in 1886), and in 1887 he married«u» Sarah Margaret Smith «/u» (1857-1925) in Camden, New Jersey. (Sarah had been married first to John M. Campbell, a Canadian immigrant, who died in 1881 from small pox.) In 1891, Bayard and Sarah took up residence with Sarah's mother at 4202 Ludlow St.; Bayard worked as a clerk and Sarah as a dressmaker. Bayard's date of death is unknown, Sarah died 12 February 1925. | WINDERS, Bayard Taylor (I25265)
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590 | According to John H Winder: «u»«b»Benjamin Franklin Winders «/u»«/b» (1867-1948) (known as Frank) was born in Washington County, Maryland in May 1867 and came to Polo, Illinois (in Ogle County) when only two years old. At the age of 13 he was working as a servant in the household of John and Cleo Powell in Wysox Township, Carroll County (just to the west of Polo). He married «u»Mary J. Johnsen «/u» (1868-1934) on 27 Aug 1890 in DeKalb County, Illinois. (She was the daughter of Peter Johnsen, the original proprietor of the Johnsen House hotel that Frank's brother Harry had tried to run for a year in 1892.) His job as a claim agent for the Chicago Great Western railroad had him moving between the Chicago area and Minneapolis-St. Paul; eventually he took a job as a claim agent for the Minneapolis Street Railway Company and he and Mary settled in Minneapolis. | WINDERS, Benjamin Frank (I25261)
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591 | According to John H Winder: «u»«b»Bertha E. Winders «/u»«/b» was born on 7 January 1885 in Tama County, Iowa where she grew up and married George Samuel Manfull on 14 December 1905. Shortly after her marriage, the couple moved to Marshall County, Iowa where George ran a farm, until he retired and moved into town, where the couple resided at 1209 S. 12«sup»th«/sup» Avenue, Marshalltown for several years. They both died in 1965 and are buried together under a single stone in Riverside Cemetery in Marshalltown. They had no children. | WINDERS, Bertha E (I25488)
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592 | According to John H Winder: «u»«b»Carl Elmer Winders «/u»«/b» was born in Oelwein (Fayette County), Iowa on 28 January 1897 and lived there until his mother moved him and his sister Eva to Zearing, in Story County, where they lived with his maternal grandmother. He married «u»Gladys Ethel Marshall «/u» (1898-1977) in Ames, Iowa on 18 December 1916. Shortly thereafter they moved to Des Moines, where Carl eventually came to work for the school district as a painter. Their presence in Des Moines is reflected in the City Directory through 1944; in the 1945 edition of the City Directory, Carl is still listed as 'painter', but his wife is now 'Florence M.', and that continues through 1959. At some point Carl and (presumably his second) wife «u»Florence M «/u». moved to Cass Lake, Minnesota, where he is buried under a stone that he shares with "Florence May Winders" (1907-1967). Carl died on 10 October 1972 in Cass Lake, while his first wife, Gladys, died on 27 April 1977 in Des Moines. | WINDERS, Carl Elmer (I23634)
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593 | According to John H Winder: «u»«b»Carrie Belle Winders «/u»«/b» was born 27 March 1871 in Tama, Iowa, Hiram and Hetta Winders' second daughter. She married «u»William Jackson «/u» (1867-1934), also a Tama native, in 1896 and they farmed in Tama County before moving to Lincoln, Oklahoma (1910 census) and then to Bates County, Missouri (1920 and 1930 census). Will Jackson died in Butler, Missouri 27 March 1934 and Carrie died in Butler on 12 January 1964. They are both buried in Oak Hill Cemetery in Butler. They had four children. | WINDERS, Carrie Belle (I22069)
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594 | According to John H Winder: «u»«b»Carrie Winders «/u»«/b» (1871-1951), the last of John and Lydia Shoop Winders' children, was born in Polo, Illinois on 21 December 1871 and married Benjamin F. Barnhizer [21521](1867-1946) in Dixon, Illinois in February 1892 (according to reporting in the Dixon «i»Telegraph«/i».) She and Benjamin farmed near Polo for more than 50 years, and after he died in 1946, she went to live with her youngest daughter, Nina Barnhizer Gillott, in Drexel Hill, Pa. until her death on 15 July 1951. She and Benjamin are both buried in Fairmount Cemetery in Polo. | WINDERS, Carrie (I25249)
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595 | According to John H Winder: «u»«b»Carson R. Winders «/u»«/b» was born 11 June 1915 in Tama County, Iowa, served in the Army in WW II and married «u»Lenora D. Shank «/u» (1924-1979). They ran a dairy farm in Chickasaw County, Iowa until the mid-1950s, when they moved to a new farm south of Grundy Center, Iowa. Lenora died in April 1979, and Carson died on 11 November 1994. He is buried in Garwin Union Cemetery, Garwin, Iowa, but there is no record of Lenora's burial. The couple had three children. | WINDERS, Carson R. (I20432)
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596 | According to John H Winder: «u»«b»Catherine "Kitty" Floy Winders «/u»«/b» was born 19 September 1855 in Illinois, probably Ogle County. She was 4 years old when the family was living in Iowa, but spent most of her childhood in Ogle County. She married «u»Clinton Elmer Price «/u» (1854-1937) on 31 Dec 1885 in Ogle County-he started out as a hardware merchant and eventually became a plumber and then a plumbing and heating contractor. After Kitty died on 2 May 1917, Clinton married Lula Barber in Mount Morris on 12 November 1923. Clinton died on 12 July 1937 and is buried in Oakwood Cemetery, as is Kitty. They had one daughter, Pauline Price, born 1 August 1896 in Mount Morris, married John Wilbert Metzger on 27 November 1919, and died in March of 1981 in Decatur, Illinois. | WINDERS, Catherine Floy (I21524)
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597 | According to John H Winder: «u»«b»Catherine Amelia Winders «/u»«/b» (1858-1947) (commonly known as Kate, variant spelling 'Kathryn') was born 15 October 1858 in Washington County, Maryland and was 12 years old when the family moved west to Ogle County, Illinois. She moved with her brother Samuel to Sycamore, Illinois (in DeKalb County, to the east of where the Winders had originally settled around Polo, in Ogle County) and worked in the bakery that he ran there, and then married «u»Abraham J. Delp «/u» (1857-1897) sometime in the mid-1880s, with whom she had three daughters: Lila Moselle Delp (1889-1930); Hazel Delp (1891-1963), married Harry M. Donichy (1888-1952) and had one son, John Robert Donichy (1920-1994); and Ruth Delp (1893-unk). After Abraham died, she married «u»George F. Shuler «/u» , a substantial famer with a 530-acre farm north of Sterling, Illinois. She died on 23 May 1947, and is buried in the Mennonite Church cemetery in Sterling. | WINDERS, Catharine Amelia (I24082)
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598 | According to John H Winder: «u»«b»Chalmers Winders «/u»«/b» was born in Tama County, Iowa on 17 July 1897, went to high school there and when he registered for the draft in World War I he was working at the First National Bank in Toledo (Iowa). He married «u»Mary K. Goodall «/u» (1895-1982) in Tama County on 3 November 1920 and got into the car business, managing an auto garage (1930 census) and managing a retail auto business (1940 census). He died in Los Angeles county, California (possibly while visiting his son) on 17 March 1969; Mary lived on in Belle Plaine, Iowa until her death in August of 1982. They are both buried in Oak Hill Cemetery, Belle Plaine. The couple had three children. | WINDERS, Chalmars (I25273)
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599 | According to John H Winder: «u»«b»Charles Harold Winders «/u»«/b» (1933-2009), who was born when they were still living in Maywood and went to high school at Proviso Township High School, graduating in 1951. He then attended the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana, where he majored in pharmacy studies and eventually set up Sun Dial Drugs, Inc. in Naples, Florida in the mid-1970s, with his wife Shirley serving as president of the company. Charles died on 26 Dec 2009 in Demorest. | WINDERS, Charles Harold (I26257)
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600 | According to John H Winder: «u»«b»Charles Sherwood Winders «/u»«/b» (1861-1933)«b» «/b»was born in Ogle County, Illinois on 5 May 1861, and moved with his family to Tama County, Iowa when he was a boy of seven. He grew up there and married «u»Babetta Grau «/u» (1863-1955), the daughter of German immigrants, in 1882 (according to 'A History of Tama County, Iowa, Vol II'; the 1900 census says 1884). Charles raised purebred Shorthorn cattle and Duroc Jersey hogs on their 160 acre farm in Highland Township, and served as a county supervisor, as well as treasurer of the school board. | WINDERS, Charles Sherwood (I22066)
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