Mary Gough1
F
Mary Gough||p192.htm#i17864|John Gough|b. 1608|p191.htm#i17865|Margaret Wedgwood|d. 1637|p532.htm#i17866|||||||||||||
Mary Gough was the daughter of John Gough and Margaret Wedgwood.1 Mary Gough married John Huntbach de Seawall, son of Thomas Huntbach of Seawall and Anne Astley of Woodeaton, on 21 October 1658.1
Children of Mary Gough and John Huntbach de Seawall
- John Huntbach2 d. b 1663
- Margaret Huntbach2 b. 1660
- Anne Huntbach2 b. 1662
- Sarah Huntbach1 b. a 10 Apr 1663
Edith Audrey Gouinlock1
F, b. circa 1886
Edith Audrey Gouinlock|b. c 1886|p192.htm#i1937|George Gouinlock||p192.htm#i19900|Agnes Holmested||p231.htm#i19901|||||||||||||
Edith Audrey Gouinlock was born circa 1886 in Toronto, Ontario.1 She was the daughter of George Gouinlock and Agnes Holmested.1 Edith Audrey Gouinlock married Trevor Heu-de-Bourck Temple, son of Robert Handcock Temple and Rose Heudebourck, on 11 June 1912 in Toronto.1
Citations
- [S232] Ancestry.com Database, Ontario, Canada Marriages, 1857-1924. York 1912.
George Gouinlock1
M
George Gouinlock married Agnes Holmested.1
Child of George Gouinlock and Agnes Holmested
- Edith Audrey Gouinlock+1 b. c 1886
Citations
- [S232] Ancestry.com Database, Ontario, Canada Marriages, 1857-1924. York 1912.
Alice Bache Gould1
F, b. 11 March 1868, d. 1953
Alice Bache Gould|b. 11 Mar 1868\nd. 1953|p192.htm#i13275|Benjamin Apthorp Gould|b. 1824\nd. 3 Jun 1896|p192.htm#i10907|Mary Apthorp Quincy|b. Aug 1834\nd. 1883|p369.htm#i9427|||||||Josiah Quincy|b. 26 Jan 1802\nd. 2 Nov 1882|p369.htm#i9405|Mary J. Miller|d. 11 Aug 1874|p305.htm#i9423|
Alice Bache Gould was born on 11 March 1868 in Lynn, Massachusetts.2 She was the daughter of Benjamin Apthorp Gould and Mary Apthorp Quincy.1 Mathematician and historian.
As a young child she lived with her family in Cordoba, Argentina where her father was the head of the Argentine National Observatory. Alice returned to Cambridge in 1871 to live with relatives while her family stayed in Argentina. In 1885 she began her education at the Society for the Collegiate Instruction of Women in Cambridge (later Radcliffe College). She then attended Bryn Mawr College from 1886-1889, where she received her A.B. in mathematics and physics as a member of the school's second graduating class. She continued her study of mathematics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Newham College in England from 1890-1893.
Upon her return from England, Alice taught mathematics for a year at Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota and began her graduate studies at the University of Chicago in 1894. She received a fellowship from the University in 1895 for her PhD thesis on Brodian geometry under the guidance of mathematician E. H. Moore. The death of her father on Thanksgiving 1896 and the loss of her fellowship in 1897 put a strain Alice's health and she returned to Cambridge, Mass. before completing her thesis.
In 1897 Alice established an endowment at the Academy of Science in her father's name. She spent the next several years looking for work and occasionally lecturing on mathematics. She attempted to complete her studies in Chicago but returned to Cambridge to recover from poor health. In 1900 she began research for her monograph on Louis Agassiz which was published by her cousin-in-law Mark A. De Wolfe Howe in 1901 as part of the Beacon Biographies of Eminent Americans series. In 1903 Alice traveled to Puerto Rico to recover from the flu and from 1905-1907 was instrumental in establishing the "Porto Rico Teachers' Fund" that raised money for a nursing school.
During her early visits to Puerto Rico Alice became interested in the early colonization of the new world, especially Columbus' first voyage. In 1911, she traveled to Spain where she spent most of the rest of her life researching in Spanish archives, most notably the Archivo de Simancas. In July 1919 she published a story in the Atlantic Monthly entitled "The Adventure of the Missing Fortnight" that described some of her experiences researching in Spain.
During World War I Alice worked as a volunteer in the espionage office of the United States embassy in Spain and led an effort to send female clerical workers to the embassy to help with war work. She returned to the Chicago in 1918 to teach navigation to naval officer candidates at the University of Chicago Ensign School at the Municipal Pier. During this time she began research for on her essay on Great Circle Sailing, a navigational technique that calculates points along a great circle route.
In 1926 Alice returned to Spain to continue her research on Columbus and became involved in public education measures and the establishment of local schools in Simancas. The outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in 1936 forced her to return to Boston but after the war she returned to Spain. She lived the remainder of her life in Simancas.1 Alice Bache Gould died in 1953 in Simancas, Spain.1
As a young child she lived with her family in Cordoba, Argentina where her father was the head of the Argentine National Observatory. Alice returned to Cambridge in 1871 to live with relatives while her family stayed in Argentina. In 1885 she began her education at the Society for the Collegiate Instruction of Women in Cambridge (later Radcliffe College). She then attended Bryn Mawr College from 1886-1889, where she received her A.B. in mathematics and physics as a member of the school's second graduating class. She continued her study of mathematics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Newham College in England from 1890-1893.
Upon her return from England, Alice taught mathematics for a year at Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota and began her graduate studies at the University of Chicago in 1894. She received a fellowship from the University in 1895 for her PhD thesis on Brodian geometry under the guidance of mathematician E. H. Moore. The death of her father on Thanksgiving 1896 and the loss of her fellowship in 1897 put a strain Alice's health and she returned to Cambridge, Mass. before completing her thesis.
In 1897 Alice established an endowment at the Academy of Science in her father's name. She spent the next several years looking for work and occasionally lecturing on mathematics. She attempted to complete her studies in Chicago but returned to Cambridge to recover from poor health. In 1900 she began research for her monograph on Louis Agassiz which was published by her cousin-in-law Mark A. De Wolfe Howe in 1901 as part of the Beacon Biographies of Eminent Americans series. In 1903 Alice traveled to Puerto Rico to recover from the flu and from 1905-1907 was instrumental in establishing the "Porto Rico Teachers' Fund" that raised money for a nursing school.
During her early visits to Puerto Rico Alice became interested in the early colonization of the new world, especially Columbus' first voyage. In 1911, she traveled to Spain where she spent most of the rest of her life researching in Spanish archives, most notably the Archivo de Simancas. In July 1919 she published a story in the Atlantic Monthly entitled "The Adventure of the Missing Fortnight" that described some of her experiences researching in Spain.
During World War I Alice worked as a volunteer in the espionage office of the United States embassy in Spain and led an effort to send female clerical workers to the embassy to help with war work. She returned to the Chicago in 1918 to teach navigation to naval officer candidates at the University of Chicago Ensign School at the Municipal Pier. During this time she began research for on her essay on Great Circle Sailing, a navigational technique that calculates points along a great circle route.
In 1926 Alice returned to Spain to continue her research on Columbus and became involved in public education measures and the establishment of local schools in Simancas. The outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in 1936 forced her to return to Boston but after the war she returned to Spain. She lived the remainder of her life in Simancas.1 Alice Bache Gould died in 1953 in Simancas, Spain.1
Citations
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://www.masshist.org/findingaids/doc.cfm?fa=fa0207
- [S130] Massachusetts Vital Records.
Benjamin Apthorp Gould1
M, b. 1824, d. 3 June 1896
Benjamin Apthorp Gould. Astronomer.2 He was born in 1824 in Boston, Massachusetts.2,3 He married Mary Apthorp Quincy, daughter of Josiah Quincy and Mary Jane Miller, on 29 October 1861 in Boston.1 Benjamin Apthorp Gould died on 3 June 1896 in Boston, Massachusetts.3
Child of Benjamin Apthorp Gould and Mary Apthorp Quincy
- Alice Bache Gould2 b. 11 Mar 1868, d. 1953
Citations
- [S103] Waldo Chamberlain Sprague, Genealogies of Braintree, 3993.
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://www.masshist.org/findingaids/doc.cfm?fa=fa0207
- [S130] Massachusetts Vital Records.
Charles David Gould1
M, b. 1815, d. 1866
Charles David Gould was born in 1815.1 He married Catherine Livingston Woodworth, daughter of John Woodworth and Catherine Westerlo.1 Charles David Gould died in 1866.1
Child of Charles David Gould and Catherine Livingston Woodworth
- John Woodworth Gould1 b. 11 Oct 1839
Citations
- [S250] Saint Nicholas Society, Vol. 1. p 67.
Rev. Edward Gould
M, b. circa 1801, d. 11 April 1849
Rev. Edward Gould was born circa 1801. He married Mary Anna Penelope Heigham, daughter of Rev. Henry Heigham and Elizabeth Symonds, on 26 November 1829. Rev. Edward Gould died on 11 April 1849 in Sproughton.
Elizabeth Gould1
F
Elizabeth Gould married Josiah Perham.1
Child of Elizabeth Gould and Josiah Perham
- Josiah L. Perham+1 b. 31 Jan 1803, d. 22 Oct 1868
Citations
- [S89] LDS Record, Town and vital records, 1803-1891 Wilton (Maine).
John Woodworth Gould1
M, b. 11 October 1839
John Woodworth Gould|b. 11 Oct 1839|p192.htm#i16286|Charles David Gould|b. 1815\nd. 1866|p192.htm#i16285|Catherine Livingston Woodworth|b. 1815\nd. 1880|p557.htm#i16284|||||||John Woodworth|b. 1768\nd. 1858|p557.htm#i16283|Catherine Westerlo|b. 1778\nd. 1846|p537.htm#i16282|
John Woodworth Gould was born on 11 October 1839.1 He was the son of Charles David Gould and Catherine Livingston Woodworth.1
Citations
- [S250] Saint Nicholas Society, Vol. 1. p 67.
Mary Gouldsmith1
F
Mary Gouldsmith married John Henry Gustavus Temple, son of Capt. William Henry Temple and Maria May Livingston Sewell, on 6 April 1869 in Clifton, Gloucestershire.2
Joan Goushill1
F, b. circa 1401, d. 27 April 1466
Joan Goushill|b. c 1401\nd. 27 Apr 1466|p192.htm#i11077|Sir Robert Goushill|d. 21 Jul 1403|p192.htm#i11076|Elizabeth de Arundel|d. 1425|p21.htm#i11075|||||||Richard Fitzalan, 11th Earl of Aundel|b. 1346\nd. 21 Sep 1397|p159.htm#i9975|Elizabeth de Bohun|d. 3 Apr 1385|p40.htm#i11074|
Joan Goushill was born circa 1401.2 She was the daughter of Sir Robert Goushill and Elizabeth de Arundel.1 Joan Goushill married Sir Thomas Stanley, KG Lord Stanley of Lathom and Knowsley.1 Joan Goushill died on 27 April 1466.2
Child of Joan Goushill and Sir Thomas Stanley, KG Lord Stanley of Lathom and Knowsley
Sir Robert Goushill1
M, d. 21 July 1403
Sir Robert Goushill married fourthly Elizabeth de Arundel, daughter of Richard Fitzalan, 11th Earl of Aundel and Elizabeth de Bohun, before 19 August 1401.1,2 Sir Robert Goushill was slain on 21 July 1403 at the battle of Shrewsbury.2
Child of Sir Robert Goushill and Elizabeth de Arundel
- Joan Goushill+1 b. c 1401, d. 27 Apr 1466
Evelina Hill Gove1
F, b. 4 November 1829
Evelina Hill Gove|b. 4 Nov 1829|p192.htm#i12314|Hartley Gove||p192.htm#i15501|Evalina Hill||p220.htm#i15502|||||||||||||
Evelina Hill Gove was born on 4 November 1829 in Bath, Sagadahoc, Maine.1 She was the daughter of Hartley Gove and Evalina Hill.2 Evelina Hill Gove married Colonel Frederick Dummer Sewall, son of General Joseph Sewall and Eliza Smith, on 14 November 1849 in Bath, Sagadahoc, Maine, They had eight children of whom only two were lving at the date of the 1900 Census.1,3
Children of Evelina Hill Gove and Colonel Frederick Dummer Sewall
- Capt. Joseph Ellis Sewall2 b. c 1854, d. 1925
- Lina Gove Sewall2 b. Feb 1858
Hartley Gove1
M
Hartley Gove married Evalina Hill.
Child of Hartley Gove and Evalina Hill
- Evelina Hill Gove+1 b. 4 Nov 1829
Citations
- [S216] Anon, Graduates of Bowdoin College, p. 428.
Hammond Gowen
M, d. 7 February 1909
Hammond Gowen. Advocate.1 He married Emily Anna Dalkin, daughter of Henry Scarth Dalkin, on 27 April 1865 in Holy Trinity Church, Quebec.1 Hammond Gowen died on 7 February 1909.2
Child of Hammond Gowen and Emily Anna Dalkin
- Hammond Gowen3 b. 28 Oct 1871
Citations
- [S232] Ancestry.com Database, Quebec Vital and Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1621-1967. Québec (Anglican Cathedral Holy Trinity church), 1865.
- [S522] Gordon A. Morley and William J. Park, Mount Hermon Cemetery, Q293.
- [S232] Ancestry.com Database, Quebec Vital and Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1621-1967. Québec (Anglican Cathedral Holy Trinity church), 1871.
Hammond Gowen1
M, b. 28 October 1871
Hammond Gowen|b. 28 Oct 1871|p192.htm#i20873|Hammond Gowen|d. 7 Feb 1909|p192.htm#i19100|Emily Anna Dalkin|b. 16 Jul 1844\nd. 3 Apr 1927|p114.htm#i19099|||||||Henry S. Dalkin||p114.htm#i20992||||
Hammond Gowen was born on 28 October 1871 in Quebec.1 He was the son of Hammond Gowen and Emily Anna Dalkin.1
Citations
- [S232] Ancestry.com Database, Quebec Vital and Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1621-1967. Québec (Anglican Cathedral Holy Trinity church), 1871.
Nathaniel Gowen1
M
The marriage intention of Nathaniel Gowen and Miranda Pattee, daughter of Jeremiah Pattee and Jane Sewall, was published on 7 September 1821 in Georgetown, Maine.1
Citations
- [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 147 p. 186.
(unknown) Gower
M
Elizabeth Grafton1
F
Tradition is that she was a daughter of the Earl of Derby; that, falling in love with William Parker, she became his wife, and, abandoning fortune and family honors, followed him to America to live almost unknown, and to endure privation and mental distress on account of her marriage.2 Elizabeth Grafton married Hon. William Parker.1
Child of Elizabeth Grafton and Hon. William Parker
- Mary Parker1 b. 23 Dec 1738, d. 28 May 1788
Elizabeth Graham1
F
Elizabeth Graham||p192.htm#i10643|Patrick Graham, 1st Baron Graham|d. 1466|p192.htm#i11503|Christian Erskine||p153.htm#i11504|||||||Robert Erskine, Lord Erskine (later) Earl of Mar|d. 7 Sep 1451 or 6 Nov 1452|p153.htm#i11505|Elizabeth Lindsay||p270.htm#i11506|
Elizabeth Graham was the daughter of Patrick Graham, 1st Baron Graham and Christian Erskine.2 Elizabeth Graham married William Livingston third of Kilsyth, son of Edward Livingston of Balcastle and Margaret Dunbar, by agreement dated 19 December 1480.3
Child of Elizabeth Graham and William Livingston third of Kilsyth
- William Livingston fourth of Kilsyth+2 d. b 21 Jul 1545
Jane Graham
F
Jane Graham||p192.htm#i9904|Ralph Graham of Rockmoor||p192.htm#i16970||||||||||||||||
Jane Graham was the daughter of Ralph Graham of Rockmoor.1
Child of Jane Graham and George Gordon 5th Duke of Gordon, 8th Marquess, 2nd Earl of Norwich
- Georgiana Huntly Gordon b. 15 Mar 1804, d. 24 May 1890
Citations
- [S299] Hugh McCrae, Georgiana's Journal, p. 5.
Letticia Graham
F
Letticia Graham married Lt. General Robert Hill Farmar R.M., son of Captain Edward Farmar and Katharine St. Barbe, in 1779 in Ireland.
Margaret Graham
F
Margaret Graham||p192.htm#i13531|Sir David Graham of Montrose||p192.htm#i13532||||||||||||||||
Margaret Graham was the daughter of Sir David Graham of Montrose. Margaret Graham married Hugh 4th Earl of Ross.
Child of Margaret Graham and Hugh 4th Earl of Ross
- Euphemia of Ross+ b. bt 1325 - 1330, d. 1387
Mary Ann Graham1
F
Mary Ann Graham married Charles Frederick Jarvis, son of Colonel Samuel Peters Jarvis and Mary Boyles Powell.1
Children of Mary Ann Graham and Charles Frederick Jarvis
- Isabel Grace Jarvis2
- Emily Maud Jarvis2
- Charles Leonard Jarvis3 b. 9 Sep 1867
- Samuel Peters Jarvis2 b. 9 Feb 1869
- William George Jarvis2 b. 27 Jan 1871
Patrick Graham, 1st Baron Graham1
M, d. 1466
Patrick Graham, 1st Baron Graham married Christian Erskine, daughter of Robert Erskine, Lord Erskine (later) Earl of Mar and Elizabeth Lindsay.1 Patrick Graham, 1st Baron Graham died in 1466.2
Child of Patrick Graham, 1st Baron Graham and Christian Erskine
Ralph Graham of Rockmoor1
M
Child of Ralph Graham of Rockmoor
Citations
- [S299] Hugh McCrae, Georgiana's Journal, p. 5.
Anna Grand-Girard1
F
Anna Grand-Girard||p192.htm#i2834|Emile Grand-Girard||p192.htm#i2835|Georgianna Herdman||p217.htm#i2836|||||||||||||
Anna Grand-Girard was the daughter of Emile Grand-Girard and Georgianna Herdman.1 Anna Grand-Girard married Rev. David Stanton Tappan, son of Dr. Benjamin Tappan and Cella Stanton, on 12 August 1869.1
Citations
- [S18] Various editors, Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans, vol. 10, p. 96.
Emile Grand-Girard1
M
Emile Grand-Girard married Georgianna Herdman.1 Emile Grand-Girard was living in Hillsbore, Ohio.1
Child of Emile Grand-Girard and Georgianna Herdman
Citations
- [S18] Various editors, Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans, vol. 10, p. 96.
Anne Sarah Grant1
F, b. circa 1794, d. January 1879
Anne Sarah Grant|b. c 1794\nd. Jan 1879|p192.htm#i9837|James Grant||p193.htm#i9838||||||||||||||||
Anne Sarah Grant was born circa 1794 in St. Vincent, West Indies.2 She was the daughter of James Grant.1 Anne Sarah Grant married Cdr. Charles Tindal R.N., son of Robert Tindal and Sarah Pocock, on 25 October 1816.1 Anne Sarah Grant died in January 1879.1
Children of Anne Sarah Grant and Cdr. Charles Tindal R.N.
- Edward Robert Tindal1 d. 7 Jun 1835
- Frederick Colquhoun Tindal1 d. 22 Jun 1855
- Arthur de Veuille Tindal1 d. 7 Aug 1854
- Francis Herringham Tindal1 d. 1857
- Harriet Jane Tindal1
- Mary Tindal
- Laura Tindal1 b. c 1819, d. 1873
- Merelina Tindal1 b. c 1820, d. Sep 1912
- Isabella Tindal1 b. c 1822
- Charles Grant Tindal+1 b. 31 Jul 1823, d. Mar 1914
- Adelaide Tindal1 b. c 1830
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