Louise Suydam Oakley1

F, b. 1857, d. 1934
     Louise Suydam Oakley was born in 1857.2 She married secondly Albert Barnes Boardman on 1 February 1922.1 Louise Suydam Oakley died in 1934.2

Citations

  1. [S160] New York Times, February 1, 1922.
  2. [S34] Unverified internet information, Southampton Cemetery, Suffolk County, Long Island, New York. 545 North Sea Road, Southampton.

Nellie Soule Oakman1

F
     Nellie Soule Oakman married Edward Lorraine Young.1

Child of Nellie Soule Oakman and Edward Lorraine Young

Citations

  1. [S363] Robert S. Fletcher, Amherst College Biographical Record.

John Odell1

M
John Odell||p344.htm#i12402|Thomas Odell|d. c 13 May 1698|p344.htm#i12399|Christiana Goodman|b. c 1653\nd. 7 Jul 1698|p194.htm#i12400|||||||John Goodman|d. 1674/75|p194.htm#i12403|Mary (Unknown)|d. Apr 1674|p7.htm#i12404|
     John Odell was the son of Thomas Odell and Christiana Goodman.1 John Odell died in Newport Pagnell, Buckinghamshire, as an infant.1

Citations

  1. [S151] Letter, unknown author to unknown recipient, 9 December 1796.

Susanna Odell1,2

F, b. circa 1678, d. 9 March 1729
Susanna Odell|b. c 1678\nd. 9 Mar 1729|p344.htm#i5388|Thomas Odell|d. c 13 May 1698|p344.htm#i12399|Christiana Goodman|b. c 1653\nd. 7 Jul 1698|p194.htm#i12400|||||||John Goodman|d. 1674/75|p194.htm#i12403|Mary (Unknown)|d. Apr 1674|p7.htm#i12404|
     Susanna Odell was born circa 1678 (calculated from her age at death).3 She was the daughter of Thomas Odell and Christiana Goodman.2 Susanna Odell married Thomas Smith, son of William Smith and Elizabeth Hartley, on 13 May 1696 in Buckinghamshire ?4 A settlement for the marriage Susanna Odell and an unknown person was made on 7 November 1696; Property of William Smith and heirs (messuage, cottage and lands in Portfields and meadows). Pre-Nuptial Marriage Settlement by Assignment of Term of 3,000 years.5 She and Thomas Smith emigrated in 1715 from Newport Pagnell, Buckinghamshire to New York. Three of their older sons had preceded them (however Carver states that Susanna died in England before her husband left for New York).6 Susanna Odell died on 9 March 1729 in London, England.3

Children of Susanna Odell and Thomas Smith

Citations

  1. [S40] Unknown compiler, "The Honourable William Smith 1728-1793", Ancestral File, p51.
  2. [S151] Letter, unknown author to unknown recipient, 9 December 1796.
  3. [S509] William S. Pelletreau, Historic Homes, Vol. I, p. 296.
  4. [S62] William Richard Cutter, New England Families.
  5. [S152] Unknown compiler, "Centre for Buckinghamshire Studies", Ancestral File, Ivinghoe Manor and Newport Pagnell Deeds D 27/113.
  6. [S40] Unknown compiler, "The Honourable William Smith 1728-1793", Ancestral File, p.1.
  7. [S167] William S. Pelletreau, Wills of the Smith families, p. 123.

Thomas Odell1

M, d. circa 13 May 1698
      Of Simpson, Buckinghamshire.1 Thomas Odell married Christiana Goodman, daughter of John Goodman and Mary (Unknown). Thomas Odell died circa 13 May 1698.1

Children of Thomas Odell and Christiana Goodman

Citations

  1. [S151] Letter, unknown author to unknown recipient, 9 December 1796.

Thomas Odell1

M, d. 1749
Thomas Odell|d. 1749|p344.htm#i12401|Thomas Odell|d. c 13 May 1698|p344.htm#i12399|Christiana Goodman|b. c 1653\nd. 7 Jul 1698|p194.htm#i12400|||||||John Goodman|d. 1674/75|p194.htm#i12403|Mary (Unknown)|d. Apr 1674|p7.htm#i12404|
     Thomas Odell was the son of Thomas Odell and Christiana Goodman.1 Thomas Odell died in 1749.1 Thomas upon the death of John his brother, inherited the whole Estate, but falling into grand Company when he had obtained full age, and being very agreeable person of wit and humour, and much solicited by the Nobility and Gentry of a Superior Rank which took his attention from his own affairs he soon spent his Estate, and afterwards obtained a small office under the Duke of Grafton Lord Chamberlain, of Two Hundred Pounds per annum.1

Citations

  1. [S151] Letter, unknown author to unknown recipient, 9 December 1796.

Alice d' Odingsells1

F
Alice d' Odingsells||p344.htm#i18316|William d' Odingsells|d. 19 Apr 1295|p344.htm#i14463|Ela fitz Walter||p549.htm#i14464|||||||Walter fitz Robert|d. b 10 Apr 1258|p397.htm#i14465|Ida Longespee||p294.htm#i14466|
     Alice d' Odingsells was the daughter of William d' Odingsells and Ela fitz Walter.1

Citations

  1. [S144] William Salt Archaeological Society, Staffordshire Historical Collections, Vol. 7, Part I, First Series. p. 64. Plea Rolls of the Reign of Edward I.

Edmund d' Odingsells1

M
Edmund d' Odingsells||p344.htm#i18323|William d' Odingsells|d. 19 Apr 1295|p344.htm#i14463|Ela fitz Walter||p549.htm#i14464|||||||Walter fitz Robert|d. b 10 Apr 1258|p397.htm#i14465|Ida Longespee||p294.htm#i14466|
     Edmund d' Odingsells was the son of William d' Odingsells and Ela fitz Walter.1

Citations

  1. [S156] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 553.

Ela d' Odingsells1

F
Ela d' Odingsells||p344.htm#i18318|William d' Odingsells|d. 19 Apr 1295|p344.htm#i14463|Ela fitz Walter||p549.htm#i14464|||||||Walter fitz Robert|d. b 10 Apr 1258|p397.htm#i14465|Ida Longespee||p294.htm#i14466|
     Ela d' Odingsells was the daughter of William d' Odingsells and Ela fitz Walter.1

Citations

  1. [S144] William Salt Archaeological Society, Staffordshire Historical Collections, Vol. 7, Part I, First Series. p. 64. Plea Rolls of the Reign of Edward I.

Ida d' Odingsells

F
Ida d' Odingsells||p344.htm#i14462|William d' Odingsells|d. 19 Apr 1295|p344.htm#i14463|Ela fitz Walter||p549.htm#i14464|||||||Walter fitz Robert|d. b 10 Apr 1258|p397.htm#i14465|Ida Longespee||p294.htm#i14466|
     Ida d' Odingsells was the daughter of William d' Odingsells and Ela fitz Walter. Ida d' Odingsells married secondly John de Clinton 1st Lord Clinton.1

Citations

  1. [S34] Unverified internet information, John P. Ravilious, New Plantagenet Descent(s) to Henry Sewall (d. 1665). http://groups.google.com/group/soc.genealogy.medieval/msg/…

Margaret d' Odingsells1

F
Margaret d' Odingsells||p344.htm#i18320|William d' Odingsells|d. 19 Apr 1295|p344.htm#i14463|Ela fitz Walter||p549.htm#i14464|||||||Walter fitz Robert|d. b 10 Apr 1258|p397.htm#i14465|Ida Longespee||p294.htm#i14466|
     Margaret d' Odingsells was the daughter of William d' Odingsells and Ela fitz Walter.1

Citations

  1. [S144] William Salt Archaeological Society, Staffordshire Historical Collections, Vol. 7, Part I, First Series. p. 64. Plea Rolls of the Reign of Edward I.

William d' Odingsells1

M, d. 19 April 1295
      Of Maxstoke, Warwickshire, he also held the manor of Overhall in Cavendish, Suffolk.2 William d' Odingsells married Ela fitz Walter, daughter of Walter fitz Robert and Ida Longespee.1 William d' Odingsells died on 19 April 1295.3

Citations

  1. [S144] William Salt Archaeological Society, Staffordshire Historical Collections, Vol. 7, Part I, First Series. p. 64. Plea Rolls of the Reign of Edward I.
  2. [S34] Unverified internet information, John P. Ravilious, New Plantagenet Descent(s) to Henry Sewall (d. 1665). http://groups.google.com/group/soc.genealogy.medieval/msg/…
  3. [S156] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 553.

Henry Oelrichs1

M
     Henry Oelrichs married Julia May.1

Child of Henry Oelrichs and Julia May

Citations

  1. [S18] Various editors, Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans.

Lucy Oelrichs1

F
Lucy Oelrichs||p344.htm#i6979|Henry Oelrichs||p344.htm#i6980|Julia May||p311.htm#i6981|||||||||||||
     Lucy Oelrichs was the daughter of Henry Oelrichs and Julia May.1 Lucy Oelrichs is also recorded as Lucy Oelrichs.2 She married an unknown person they had three children.2 She married Lt. Colonel William Jay, son of John Jay and Eleanor Kingsland Field, on 12 June 1878.1

Citations

  1. [S18] Various editors, Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans.
  2. [S322] Frederick Clifton Pierce, Field genealogy, p. 384.

Sarah Offley1

F, b. 16 April 1609, d. August 1657
     Sarah Offley was baptised on 16 April 1609 at London.1 She married Capt. John Gookin, son of Daniel Gookin and Mary Byrd, before 4 February 1640/41.1 Sarah Offley died in August 1657 at the age of 48.2 She was buried in Church Point, Lynn Haven.2

Child of Sarah Offley and Capt. John Gookin

Citations

  1. [S161] Frederick William Gookin, Daniel Gookin, p. 57.
  2. [S161] Frederick William Gookin, Daniel Gookin, p. 58.

Annabel Ogden1

F
Charts
Descendants of Henry Sewell of Coventry
     Annabel Ogden married Harvey Lindsly Page, son of Prof. Charles Grafton Page and Priscilla Sewall Webster, on 30 April 1879.1

Children of Annabel Ogden and Harvey Lindsly Page

Citations

  1. [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.

Elizabeth Ogden1

F
     Elizabeth Ogden married Rev. Frederick Augustus Smith in 1859 in Montreal.1

Child of Elizabeth Ogden and Rev. Frederick Augustus Smith

Citations

  1. [S487] Herbert George Todd, Armory and Lineages of Canada, p. 88.

Mary Hone Ogden1

F, b. 1843, d. 1935
     Mary Hone Ogden was born in 1843.1 She married Charles Francis Adams, son of Charles Francis Adams and Abigail Brown Brooks, in 1865 children.1 Mary Hone Ogden died in 1935.1

Citations

  1. [S86] Various contributors, The Adams Papers editorial project, ongoing.

Hon. E.D. Ogilvie1

M

Child of Hon. E.D. Ogilvie

Citations

  1. [S82] John Bernard Burke, Colonial Gentry, p. 478.

Mary Isabella Ogilvie1

F
Mary Isabella Ogilvie||p344.htm#i9892|Hon. E.D. Ogilvie||p344.htm#i9893||||||||||||||||
     Mary Isabella Ogilvie was the daughter of Hon. E.D. Ogilvie.1 Mary Isabella Ogilvie married John Travers Tindal, son of Charles Grant Tindal and Anne Amory Travers, on 20 June 1888.1

Children of Mary Isabella Ogilvie and John Travers Tindal

Citations

  1. [S82] John Bernard Burke, Colonial Gentry, p. 478.

Ellen Maud Ogilvy1

F
Ellen Maud Ogilvy||p344.htm#i8251||||Ellen Grasett Powell|b. 1840\nd. 1892|p372.htm#i8246|||||||John Powell|b. 19 Jun 1809\nd. 24 Feb 1881|p373.htm#i8226|Eleanor Drean|b. c 1812|p139.htm#i8227|
     Ellen Maud Ogilvy was the daughter of Ellen Grasett Powell.1

Citations

  1. [S82] John Bernard Burke, Colonial Gentry, p. 635.

Florence Dagmar Ogilvy1

F
Florence Dagmar Ogilvy||p344.htm#i8252||||Ellen Grasett Powell|b. 1840\nd. 1892|p372.htm#i8246|||||||John Powell|b. 19 Jun 1809\nd. 24 Feb 1881|p373.htm#i8226|Eleanor Drean|b. c 1812|p139.htm#i8227|
     Florence Dagmar Ogilvy was the daughter of Ellen Grasett Powell.1

Citations

  1. [S82] John Bernard Burke, Colonial Gentry, p. 635.

John Herbert Cecil Ogilvy1

M
John Herbert Cecil Ogilvy||p344.htm#i8250||||Ellen Grasett Powell|b. 1840\nd. 1892|p372.htm#i8246|||||||John Powell|b. 19 Jun 1809\nd. 24 Feb 1881|p373.htm#i8226|Eleanor Drean|b. c 1812|p139.htm#i8227|
     John Herbert Cecil Ogilvy was the son of Ellen Grasett Powell.1 John Herbert Cecil Ogilvy. Lieutenant, Royal Canadian Artillery.2

Citations

  1. [S82] John Bernard Burke, Colonial Gentry, p. 634.
  2. [S82] John Bernard Burke, Colonial Gentry, p. 635.

Lawrence Murray Ogilvy1

M
Lawrence Murray Ogilvy||p344.htm#i8249||||Ellen Grasett Powell|b. 1840\nd. 1892|p372.htm#i8246|||||||John Powell|b. 19 Jun 1809\nd. 24 Feb 1881|p373.htm#i8226|Eleanor Drean|b. c 1812|p139.htm#i8227|
     Lawrence Murray Ogilvy was the son of Ellen Grasett Powell.1

Citations

  1. [S82] John Bernard Burke, Colonial Gentry, p. 634.

Helen Olcott1

F
     Helen Olcott married Rufus Choate, son of Capt. David Choate and Miriam Foster, on 29 March 1825.1

Citations

  1. [S268] Ephraim Orcutt Jameson, The Choates in America, p. 109.

Timothy Olcott1

M
     Timothy Olcott. Of Chester, Vermont.1 He married Elizabeth Chandler, daughter of Judge Thomas Chandler and Elizabeth Eliot, on 11 February 1766.1

Citations

  1. [S70] Unknown author, The Chandler family. The descendants of William and Annis Chandler, who settled in Roxbury, Mass. 1637., p. 155.

Count Dietrich Oldenburg1

M, d. 1444
     Count Dietrich Oldenburg married Hedwig Schleswig and Holstein. Count Dietrich Oldenburg died in 1444.1

Child of Count Dietrich Oldenburg and Hedwig Schleswig and Holstein

Citations

  1. [S34] Unverified internet information.

Dr. Stephen Olin1

M, b. 2 March 1797, d. 16 August 1851
     Dr. Stephen Olin was born on 2 March 1797 in Leicester, Vermont. He was a methodist clergyman and educator; president of Wesleyan University in 1842, and the author of Travels in Egypt, Arabia Petræa, and the Holy Land; Greece and the Golden Horn; College Life, Its theory and Practice; and Youthful Piety. He married Julia Matilda Lynch, daughter of Judge James Lynch and Janetje Maria Tillotson, on 18 October 1843.1 Dr. Stephen Olin died on 16 August 1851 in Middleton, Connecticut, at the age of 54.

Citations

  1. [S18] Various editors, Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans.

Hon. Andrew Oliver1

M, b. 1731, d. 1799
Hon. Andrew Oliver|b. 1731\nd. 1799|p344.htm#i9987|Lt. Gov. Andrew Oliver|b. 28 Mar 1706\nd. 3 Mar 1774|p344.htm#i9988|Mary Fitch|d. 26 Nov 1732|p166.htm#i11105|Daniel Oliver|b. 28 Feb 1664\nd. 23 Jul 1732|p345.htm#i7847|Elizabeth Belcher|d. 21 May 1736|p34.htm#i11109|Hon. Thomas Fitch||p166.htm#i11106||||
     Hon. Andrew Oliver. Judge, Court of Common Pleas.3 He was born in 1731.2 He was the son of Lt. Gov. Andrew Oliver and Mary Fitch.1,2 Hon. Andrew Oliver graduated in 1749 from Harvard.1 He married Mary Lynde, daughter of Hon. Benjamin Lynde, on 28 May 1752.3 Hon. Andrew Oliver died in 1799.2

Child of Hon. Andrew Oliver and Mary Lynde

Citations

  1. [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 5, p. 53.
  2. [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 130 p. 207.
  3. [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 19 p. 104.

Lt. Gov. Andrew Oliver1

M, b. 28 March 1706, d. 3 March 1774
Lt. Gov. Andrew Oliver|b. 28 Mar 1706\nd. 3 Mar 1774|p344.htm#i9988|Daniel Oliver|b. 28 Feb 1664\nd. 23 Jul 1732|p345.htm#i7847|Elizabeth Belcher|d. 21 May 1736|p34.htm#i11109|Peter Oliver|b. c 1615\nd. 11 Apr 1670|p345.htm#i2532|Sarah Newdigate|d. 1692|p338.htm#i7843|Andrew Belcher||p34.htm#i11110||||
     Lt. Gov. Andrew Oliver. A Loyalist. He was born on 28 March 1706 in Boston, Massachusetts.2 He was the son of Daniel Oliver and Elizabeth Belcher.2 Lt. Gov. Andrew Oliver graduated in 1724 from Harvard.3 He married firstly Mary Fitch, daughter of Hon. Thomas Fitch, on 20 June 1728.3 He was Secretary, Stamp-Distributor, and Lieut-Governor of Massachusetts. In 1765, soon after receiving the appointment of Stamp-officer, the building which he had fitted for the transaction of business was demolished by a mob, and he was compelled to resign. He was then allowed to enjoy his post of Secretary without molestation for several months. But before the close of the year, a report that he was seeking to be restored to his place of Stamp-officer, obtained circulation, and he was required to make a public statement upon the subject. He complied with the demand, and published a declaration, that he would not act under his commission; but this was deemed unsatisfactory, and he was desired to appear under the Liberty Tree, and there resign the office in form, and in the presence of the people. With this demand he also complied, and at the proper time, and while two thousand persons surrounded him, he made oath to the following declaration: " That he had never taken any measures, in consequence of his deputation, to act in his office as distributor of stamps, and that he never would, directly or indirectly, by himself, or any under him, make use of his deputation, or take any measures for enforcing the Stamp Act in America." The multitude gave three cheers, and allowed him to depart. But so determined a course on the part of the Whigs gave him great pain, and caused intense suffering both to himself and his family. In 1770, Mr. Oliver was appointed Lieutenant-Governor.
In 1773, several letters which he had written to persons in England were obtained by Franklin, and sent to Massachusetts. These letters caused much excitement, and became the subject of discussion throughout the Colony. The Whigs of the House of Representatives agreed upon a report, that the manifest tendency and design of these and other similar communications of Hutchinson, Paxton, Moffat, Auchmuty, Rogers, and Rome, was to overthrow the Constitution, and introduce arbitrary power. In addition to the assaults at home, Junius Americanus, a writer in the public papers in England, charged him with the grave crime of perjury. Mr. Oliver was now advanced in life. He had always been subject to disorders of a bilious nature; and unable to endure the disquiet and misery caused by his position in affairs at so troubled a period, soon sunk under the burden and died after a short illness. In private life he was a most estimable man; but his public career, though earnestly defended by his brother in-law, Governor Hutchinson, is open to censure. No man in Massachusetts was more unpopular; and Hutchinson remarks, that the violence of party spirit was evinced even at his funeral; that some members of the House of Representatives were offended because the officers of the army and navy had precedence in the procession, and retired in a body; and that "marks of disrespect were also shown by the populace to the remains of a man, whose memory, if he had died before this violent spirit was raised, would have been revered by all orders and degrees of men in the Province."4 Lt. Gov. Andrew Oliver died on 3 March 1774 in Boston at the age of 67.3

Child of Lt. Gov. Andrew Oliver and Mary Fitch

Citations

  1. [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 5, p. 53.
  2. [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 19 p. 102.
  3. [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 19 p. 103.
  4. [S312] Lorenzo Sabine, Loyalists of the American Revolution, Vol. 2 p. 135.
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