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Matches 1 to 50 of 61
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1 | (Research):(SOURCE: http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/extract/325/7369/906/a) SEE ALSO: http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/full/325/7369/906/a/DC1 | BARTHOLOMEW, Noel Ian (I104)
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2 | (Research):Althought the marriage location is given as Monte Carlo in RGB genealogy, per cutting of 27/1/1903, this marriage took place at Falcon Hall on 26/1/1903. | EDIE, David Charles Hay (I260)
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3 | (Research):Described by the family as a strange man. | JACK, Thomas Chater (I252)
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4 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I2010)
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5 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I130)
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6 | (Research):Marriage Date OPR: 1 26/11/1682 BARTHOLEMEW JAMES HELLEN CARLAW/FR2508 M LINLITHGOW /WEST LOTHIAN 668/00 0070 0239 | CARLAW, Helen (I12)
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7 | (Research):Notes marked: "m.s. Barron" ? | BARRON, Janet Anne (I253)
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8 | (Research):OPR Linlithgow entry is difficult to read. GROS 668/00 0030 0081 suggests William or Williamina was overwritten by Agnes - Sex is entered as male, but this is a mistake, but a separate database entry also exists for female. Image on file. Entry reads: Archibald Bartholomew Seaman and Margaret Henderson [A.S.N.?] Wil [Agnes] | HENDERSONE, Margaret (I1817)
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9 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I117)
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10 | (Research):«b»Lieutenant-Colonel Frederick Chater Jack D.S.O., M.C. «/b»and his wife Emilie May Sutton (a member of the 'Sutton Seeds' family). All Saints Church, Crondall, Hampshire. Lt. Frederick Chater Jack M.C., R.F.A. For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty. This officer made daring reconnaissances in the front line on three separate days under most violent machine-gun and rifle fire, obtaining much valuable information. On one occasion, at a critical moment, he rallied a company of infantry whose officers had become casualties. Throughout the operations he displayed great skill and courage. Gazette entry 25th April 1918 His gravestone gives birth as 17th April, RGB had 18th April. Family always believed it was 17th. | JACK, Frederick Chater (I354)
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11 | According to George Waite, still alive in 2011 in South Africa | BEGHIN, Claude Henry (I366)
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12 | Alister was registered as Alexander Bartholomew Macintosh at birth. The name Alister burst appears when he is 10 in census records. | MACINTOSH, Alister Bartholomew (I327)
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13 | Ancestry.com, England & Wales, Death Index: 1984-2005 (Provo, UT, USA, The Generations Network, Inc., 2007), General Register Office, England and Wales Civil Registration Indexes, London, England: General Register Office. | Source (S20)
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14 | Ancestry.com, England & Wales, Marriage Index: 1916-2005 (Provo, UT, USA, The Generations Network, Inc., 2009), General Register Office, England and Wales Civil Registration Indexes, London, England: General Register Office. | Source (S21)
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15 | Ancestry.com, Public Member Trees (Provo, UT, USA, The Generations Network, Inc., 2006). | Source (S11)
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16 | Andrew's life was a turbulent one. He accumulated considerable wealth in property working with his father George in Linlithgow and well as from his role as a partner in the Merchant Banking Co. of Stirling. He got into financial difficulties in 1804 and all his assets were sequestered. He was given sanctuary from his creditors in the Abbey of Holyrood pending settlement. This process lasted several years. He married his second wife Bethea in 1811. As a couple, they were seemingly quite destitute and Bethea started to acquire goods and services illicitly by "falsehood, fraud and wilful imposition". She was tried and found guilty in 1814 and sentenced to 7 years deportation. A year later, she was granted remission. It is possible she outlived her husband for many years. A Bethea Hamilton is recorded as deceased in 1840 in Airdrie. | BARTHOLOMEW, Andrew (I22)
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17 | Anna died young, so there were no further descendants from this marriage. | BOWIE, Anna Andrew (I54)
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18 | Anne Dinwiddie adopted Darach as surname with her partner Peter Millband. This name was passed to their descendants. | DINWIDDIE, Anne Marie (I488)
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19 | Archibald was Burgess of Linlithgow | BARTHOLOMEW, Archibald (I1)
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20 | Banns were read in April 1842 in both Linlithgow and St Pancras. | Family: George BARTHOLOMEW / Mary Ann FISHER (F1210)
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21 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: Living / Living (F188)
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22 | did not marry | BARTHOLOMEW, Martha Martin (I4881)
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23 | Died as the result of a canoeing accident. | JAMES, Duncan Philip (I579)
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24 | died at birth | BARTHOLOMEW, unnamed (I4910)
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25 | Dr John Bartholomew served in the Gordon Highlanders 1st Battalion throughout the First World War. He saw active service in Northern France and Belgium. He was awarded the Military Cross and mentioned in dispatches a number of times. He received an honorary LLD at Edinburgh University and was made Commander of the British Empire (CBE) by Queen Elizabeth in c. 1960. | BARTHOLOMEW, John (I162)
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26 | Dr. John George Bartholomew was founder in 1884 and Hon Secretary from 1884-1920 of the Scottish Geographical Society (later Royal Scottish Geographical Society). He is buried in Sintra, Portugal. | BARTHOLOMEW, John George (I160)
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27 | Dunfermline birth record names him Ralp. Ralph and his family emigrated to the United States in 1781. He studied law at the Euniversity of Edinburgh. He became “a lawyer of eminence”. | BOWIE, Ralph (I27)
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28 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I2249)
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29 | First name uncertain (to be confirmed). | MACKINDY, John D. (I75)
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30 | Frederick was awarded the Military Cross for conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty. He made daring reconnaissances in the front line on three separate days under most violent machine-gun and rifle fire, obtaining much valuable information. On one occasion, at a critical moment, he rallied a company of infantry whose officers had become casualties. Throughout the operations he displayed great skill and courage. [Gazette entry 25th April 1918] | JACK, Frederick Chater (I354)
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31 | FreeBMD, England & Wales, FreeBMD Death Index: 1837-1915 (Provo, UT, USA, The Generations Network, Inc., 2006), General Register Office, England and Wales Civil Registration Indexes, London, England: General Register Office. | Source (S12)
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32 | George later transferred to the Church of England. | BARTHOLOMEW, Rev. George (I35)
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33 | Henry Pitney Van Dusen was an episcopal layman and Presbyterian minister. He served on the World Council of Churches, chairing some committees. He wrote and edited many books, including a biography on Dag Hammerskjold, United Nations Secretary General. He was a lifetime trustee of Princeton University. He was president of the Union Theological Seminary in Manhattan, New York. | VAN DUSEN, Henry Pitney (I249)
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34 | Her name given as Janet Bartley in wedding register. | BARTHOLOMEW, Janet (I10)
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35 | Her parents were possibly George Carlaw and Margaret Meek, though a 1773 death record show a Helen Carlaw in Linlithgow with father James, so this is unconfirmed. | CARLAW, Helen (I12)
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36 | Houcke Family tree. | Source (S19)
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37 | Hugh Bartholomew died of wounds from action on the Somme. | BARTHOLOMEW, George Hugh Freeland (I246)
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38 | Ian Bartholomew held junior posts at the Westminster Hospital and at Atkinson Morley's Hospital, London. He displayed a rare talent as a caricaturist and started the tradition of caricaturing guest professors at the students' Shrove Tuesday dinner. His originals still hang in the corridors of the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital. After qualifying, he served in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve during the second world war and purchased his share as a principal in his Warminster practice in 1946. He retired in 1981. | BARTHOLOMEW, Noel Ian (I104)
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39 | Initially the name Williamina was given in the birth register but this was overwritten with Agnes. | BARTHOLOMEW, Agnes (I1818)
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40 | John (Ian) Bartholomew Seven Generations summary. | Source (S8)
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41 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I461)
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42 | John married his aunt Margaret (his mother Anne's younger sister). | BARTHOLOMEW, John senior (I34)
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43 | Kurt died in service on U.S.S. Culgoa of tuberculosis | LUNDBERG, Kurt Magnus (I254)
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44 | No birth certificate exists from Carriden. Estimate of actual birth year has been revised from 1682 to 1675. | BARTHOLOMEW, Archibald (I1)
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45 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: Living / Living (F1634)
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46 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: Stig Gillis AHLBERG / Vivian May WENNBERG (F1189)
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47 | Peter Millband adopted Darach as surname with his partner Anne Dinwiddie. This name was passed to their descendants. | MILLBAND, Peter (I494)
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48 | Philip died along with his wife and two children under tragic circumstances as a result of a road accident in South Africa on 8 November 1985. | EDWARDS, Philip (I370)
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49 | Philip Francis Hamilton-Grierson gained the rank of Captain in the service of the Royal Scots Fusiliers. He fought in the Gallipoli Campaign. He fought in the First World War, in Mesopotamia and Palestine. He held the office of Judge of the High Court [Sudan] circa 1930. He held the office of Advocate-General [Sudan] circa 1930. He was Sheriff Substitute of Inverness, Elgin and Nairn on 12 October 1936. He was invested as a Member, Order of the British Empire (M.B.E.) | HAMILTON GRIERSON, Philip Francis (I250)
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50 | Registered illegitimate, but John Bartholomew acknowledged paternity as recorded in the kirk session minutes | AITKEN, Isabell (I4205)
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