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1051 REMOVALS from HIGH LITTLETON 1702-1861 and SETTLEMENT CERTIFICATES ISSUED
to HIGH LITTLETON 1698-1780 & INDEXES

We, the Minister, Churchwardens, Overseers of the poor and other principal Inhabitants of the Parish of East Harptrey in the County of Som'set, Do own and acknowledge John BARWELL, Hannah his Wife, Ann, James, Joseph and Sarah, Sons and Daughters of the said John and Hannah BARWELL, to be Parishioners lawfully setled in our said Parish and as such will receive them or any or either of them, Unless they
or any or either of them, at any time after the date of these p'sents, shall for himself or herself gain a lawfull Settlement in any other Parish. In Witness whereof we have hereunto set our hands and seals this Fifth day of July in the Fourth year of the Reign of Our Sovereign Lord George the Second, by the grace of God, of Great
Britain, France and Ireland, King, Defender of the Faith etc. Annoq. Dom. 1730. Geo. CHURCHEY, Vicar, Charles BUTCHER, Charles SMITH, Churchwardens, John SPERING, Samuell LASBYRY, Overseers. Witnessed by Will. BUTCHER, Simon DANDO, Ja. YORKE, Francis SAVIDG.

We, Two of his Ma'tie's Justices of the peace for the said County of Som'se, do allow the above Certificate.

Will. EARLE jr., Wm. JONES.
SRO D/P/lit.h. 13/3/1-19. 
Lasbury, Samuel (I4715)
 
1052 REMOVALS from HIGH LITTLETON 1702-1861 and SETTLEMENT CERTIFICATES ISSUED to HIGH LITTLETON 1698-1780 & INDEXES

Som'settss.
To the Churchwardens and overseers of the poore of the parish of High Littleton in the County aforesaid.

Wee, whose names are hereunto subscribed and sett, the Churchwardens and overseers of the poore of the parish of Freshford in the said County, doe hereby certifie that John HARTE, Mary his wife and William their sonn, are Lawfull Inhabitants and parishoners of our said parish of Freshford. And wee doe hereby promise that, if the said John HARTE, Mary his wife and William their sonn or any Childe or Children they shall have dureinge their Residense within the said parish of High Littleton, shall at any times be chargeable to the parishonersthereof, that wee will receive them or any or either of them into our said parish of Freshford and provide for them as our parishoners, Accordinge to Law. Given under our Hands and seales this first day of March In the Tenth yeare of her majestie's Reigne over Greate Brittaine etc. Annoq. Dom. 1711/12. Peter FISHER jun'r, Joh.
SILLCOCK, Churchwardens, Wm. ROSE, Rich. EAYRS, overseers.
Signed, sealed and delivered in the presence of us, John SANDERS, John LASBURY.

Som'settss.
Wee, whose Hands are hereunto subscribed and sett, Two of her majestie's Justices of the peace for the said County, doe Allow of the above Certificate. Dated the day and yeare above written. H. BRIDGES, John
MOGG.
SRO D/P/lit.h. 13/3/1-9. 
Lasbury, John (I5048)
 
1053 Report from Sydney Morning Herald - 25th January 1911

A verdict of accidental death was recorded at an inquest at the City Coroner's Court on Tuesday in the case of Florence Lasbury who was drowned during an epileptic fit, whlle taking a bath at her residence, 4 Lord Street, Newtown, on January 21.

The deceased, who was 25 years of age, had been subject to epileptic fits for the past 17 years, and had been attended to by various doctors. Fits had occurred in the bath on two former occasions. 
Lasbury, Florence (I2811)
 
1054 Retired in 1962 Hellmann, Emma Adolphina (I562)
 
1055 Returned to the UK Hobbs, Arthur (I54925)
 
1056 REV. DR. C. EDWIN LASBURY

Our husband, father, grandfather, friend and minister, Charles Edwin Lasbury, age 72, died on Saturday, September 6, 2003, peacefully at home surrounded by his family.

Born in East Alton, Illinois to the late Bernice and Edwin C. Lasbury, he was raised in Hammond, Indiana.

Ed earned his bachelor's degree from Indiana University, his master's degree from Wesley Theological Seminary and his doctorate degree from Drew University. His ministry in the Peninsula-Delaware United Methodist Conference spanned 40 years.

He served at St. Paul's and Chester Bethel of Wilmington, St. John's of Fruitland, Maryland, St. Mark's of Easton, Maryland and the Hockessin United Methodist Church.

He was appointed the District Superintendent of the Wilmington District for a term of 6 years.

During retirement, Ed served as the Chaplain at Cokesbury Village in Hockessin, Delaware.

He held leadership positions at the conference level with a special interest in ecumenism and social issues.

He was a longstanding member of the National Conference of Christians and Jews. He was an active sailor with the New Castle Sailing Club, a volunteer usher at the Grand Opera House, and an active member of Rotary.

He enjoyed camping, fishing, traveling, fitness and family.

He was a scholar, leader, teacher, preacher, counselor, administrator, friend and activist who will be greatly missed by all who knew him.

He is survived by his wife, Kaylene (McDade) Lasbury; children, Deborah Bartell, John and Tina Lasbury and Kathleen and Michal Ingram; grandchildren, Timothy, Margaret, Emily, Zachary, Sarah, Jennifer, and James; brothers, Richard and wife, Betty Lasbury and Thomas and wife, Sarah Lasbury, both of Indiana; numerous cousins; nieces and nephews.

There will be a memorial service on Saturday September 20, 2003 at 1:00 p.m. at Hockessin United Methodist Church, 7250 Lancaster Pike, Hockessin, DE, 19707.

Burial will be private.

In lieu of flowers, the family suggests contributions to the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, 100 W. 10th Street, Suite 209, Wilmington, DE 19801 or Wesley Theological Seminary Scholarship Fund, 4500 Massachusetts Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20016. 
Lasbury, Reverend Charles Edwin (I436)
 
1057 Richard Emblin was convicted 26 October 1846 for larceny of two donkeys and given 10 years imprisonment and transported to Van Diemen's in 1851. Emblin, Richard (I83961)
 
1058 RICHARD PALMER "DICK" CORDRAY, U.S. Navy, Retired.

Son of Palmer Lloyd CORDRAY and Gertrude "Mac" MacDONALD; husband of Jzere Marlene STEVENS and Mrs. Mary Kathryn "Kay" CONSIDINE-CARR; father of one son and one daughter.

Dick's ashes were split with one-half being interred at Saint Bartholomew's Episcopal Church Columbarium in Richmond, Virginia with his second wife, Kay Considine Carr Cordray, and the remainder at Culpepper National Cemetery in Culpepper, Virginia to be with his first wife, Jzere Stevens Cordray 
Cordray, Richard Palmer (I9209)
 
1059 RN Long Service and Good conduct Medal
HMS Osprey 
Farley, Harold Thompson (I105107)
 
1060 Robert Jones lost his life at Coedely Colliery, Tonyrefail 3 October 1912 at the age of 31 crushed between railway wagons.

In January 1913 Mary Jane Jones was awarded ?173.8s under the Compensation Act and was a widow with two children.

?186.19s was paid into Court. His Honour decided not to apportion the funds but to award Mary Jane the sum of 10s a week for the maintenance of herself and her two children both under 2 years old. 
Jones, Robert (I96048)
 
1061 Robert Nussbaum (born May 30, 1892 in Strasbourg ; died April 15, 1941 in Sachsenhausen concentration camp) was a German doctor and philanthropist.

Robert Nussbaum was born as the son of the Jewish professor of anatomy and biology Moritz Nussbaum and his wife Ida, b. Koppel, born in Alsace, Germany at that time. He was an uncle of the journalist Peter Scholl-Latour.

After graduating from high school, he joined the Infantry Regiment 132 in Strasbourg on April 1, 1914 as a one-year volunteer, with whom he went to the First World War. As early as August 1914, he received the Iron Cross 2nd class from Corps commander von Deimling personally due to bold patrol undertakings. In mid-1915 he was transferred as a junior physician to Infantry Regiment 143 off Ypres and stayed there until the beginning of the Battle of Verdun when he was wounded. On November 21, 1918, he was released from military service. As chief physician of the fortress hospital in Strasbourg, he continued to look after the wounded and sick in Alsace until the hospital was closed by the French military authorities and the Germans expelled.

Robert Nussbaum then studied medicine in Tubingen , in order to obtain a Dr. med. worked in the Esslingen hospital until 1922, where he excelled in child care. After a short period in Dusseldorf, he became the first assistant doctor for infant and child protection in Dortmund . There he made himself available to the headquarters of the passive resistance during the occupation of the Ruhr, but had to leave the Ruhr area at the end of March 1923 because of imminent arrest.

Following that, Nussbaum lived and worked as a city doctor in Minden. In particular, he took care of alcoholics and tuberculosis sufferers. He served poor families not only medically. On January 29, 1932, he was appointed up to December 31, 1935 as a medical officer of the supply court. He was a member of the SPD and since his youth a member of the Wandervogels (treasurer in 1917) and the later Kronachbund.

After the "seizure of power" by the NSDAP, on August 31, 1933, because of his membership in the SPD, he was forbidden from exercising his mandate as a member of the Parents 'Council of Citizens' School II by a police order. On February 28, 1934, the Association of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians of the Minden District informed him that as a "non-Aryan" doctor he could not take part in Sunday service, while on November 6, 1934 he was awarded the Cross of Honor for Frontline Fighters.

In February 1937 there was a dispute with two Minden doctor colleagues who had asked two restaurant owners to deny access to Nussbaum's patients. This quickly led to measures and a lawsuit by the Association of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians in Germany (KVD), against which Nussbaum lodged a complaint. The two doctors sued him for insult. In two trials in May and June 1937 it condemned the Minden Schoffengericht due to questionable evidence to fines, the defendant and the plaintiffs while calling men casting. In August 1937, the Large Criminal Chamber of the Bielefeld Regional Court rejected the appeal and sentenced the accused to prison of a month. However, Nussbaum had already been arrested on July 14, 1937 and taken into "protective custody". He was never released again. In a further court case for "racial disgrace" on the basis of statements by a mentally ill person, the Bielefeld criminal chamber sentenced him to a prison sentence of three years and three years of loss of honor with a ban on practicing as a doctor for a period of five years. On the other hand, Nussbaum and his defense immediately appealed to the Imperial Court in Leipzigone that actually overturned the judgment and referred the proceedings back to the Bielefeld Regional Court. There Nussbaum was again sentenced to three years in prison. To cover the various process costs, Nussbaum's entire property had to be sold.

At the urging of Robert Nussbaum's mother, Ida Nussbaum in Kassel , a pardon was drawn up and submitted on July 15, 1940 by Nussbaum's wife Dora (n?e Quirin, 1894-1944), with rejection on August 28, 1940. After serving the prison sentence on On February 14, 1941, Robert Nussbaum was taken back into police custody and sent to Sachsenhausen concentration camp. His last letter to his family is dated April 13, 1941.

His widow continued to live very secluded in Minden and looked after herself and her son Heinrich (* 1924). The siblings G?nter (* 1925) and Anneliese (* 1928) had already moved to England at the end of the 1930s. On March 3, 1943 , the Bielefeld Special Court sentenced Dora Nussbaum to one year in prison on the basis of a denunciation . She served the sentence from May 10, 1943 to May 16, 1944 and had to pay RM 546 for this stay . During the bombing raid on November 6, 1944, she was killed in her house at Steinstrasse 9 in Minden and buried in row graves with 107 other victims in the Minden North Cemetery.

================================================

Robert Nussbaum was born on 30th May, 1892, in Strasbourg which at that time was part of the German Reich. His parents, Moritz and Ida Nussbaum nee Koppel, were both Grammar School Professors. He had a sister and his family were part of the Jewish Community.

Robert Nussbaum was studying medicine when he, in 1914, volunteered for the Military. He took part in the First World War as a private soldier and later as a student doctor. He was wounded and was awarded the Iron Cross. After his demobilisation from the Military in November 1918 he worked in the Strasbourg Hospital as a volunteer. In 1919 Strasbourg became French Elsass and he was expelled because he was German. He completed his medicinal studies in Tubingen and worked as a Doctor in Esslingen, Dusseldorf and Dortmund, where his main subject was Paediatrics. In 1923 he took part in passive resistance against French occupation in the Ruhr Valley and because of the threat of arrest fled to Minden.

From 1923 Robert Nussbaum lived with his wife, Dora nee Quinn, in Minden. Dora Nussbaum was a Christian and had three children, Heinrich, born in 1924, Gunter, born in 1925 and Anneliese born in 1928. The family first lived at Konigstrasse 74 and later moved to Steinstrasse 9, at it's junction with Stiftstrasse, with the rooms of the Doctor's practice being in the house.

Robert Nussbaum was a member of the German Socialist Party (SPD) and the vicar, Wilhelm Mensching, described him as being a social minded, energetic person with a high sense of responsibility and commitment, willing to treat alcoholics and TB patients. He was respected, loved and held in high esteem. Even in 1923 he was appointed the towns official Doctor and in 1932 was appointed the Doctor responsible at the Public Courts.

The harassment of Robert Nussbaum began with the power takeover of the Nazis because he was a Jew and a Social Democrat. In 1933 he was excluded from the parents committee of the Infants School at the suggestion of the Police because he was a member of the Social Democratic Party. He was excluded from Sunday duties by the local Association of General Practitioners for not being Aryan. In 1937 he was anonymously accused of insulting colleagues which was accompanied by disciplinary action from the German Medical Board. Two of his Minden colleagues submitted complaints against him but offered to retract them if he left Minden. He refused to leave and denied the offence at the Magistrates Court. He was found guilty of the accusation and was fined, with the option of a prison sentence. Robert Nussbaum appealed against the sentence and was arrested on the 14th July, 1937, before the court hearing. He would, until his death on 15th April, 1941, never again be free. In August, 1937, his appeal was thrown out of court. Robert Nussbaum was sentenced to one month in Prison.

At the end of 1937 Robert Nussbaum was accused of a racial violation by a patient. The Police described the female patient as rather disturbed and a Doctor called to assess her described her as a Psychopath. In the County Court in Bielefeld, in the spring of 1938, Robert Nussbaum denied the accusation but was given a three year prison sentence, a three year loss of trust and banned from practicing medicine for five years. He appealed and on 30th May, 1938, the High Court quashed the sentence and sent the case back to the County Court, which again sentenced him to three years in prison on 11th September, 1938.

Robert Nussbaum was imprisoned, in Munster and in Kassel from December 1938 until February 1941. During this time his wife and mother made several appeals for leniency on his behalf and applied for permission for him to emigrate with the family. On the 14th February, 1941, Robert Nussbaum was released from prison after serving his sentence and was immediately sent to the concentration camp at Sachsenhausen. He died there on the 15th April, 1941, in unexplained circumstances. The official diagnosis was pleurisy. 
Nussbaum, Robert (I90604)
 
1062 ROBERT W. REED

Services for Robert W. Reed, 58, longtime Indianapolis resident, at noon Saturday in Flanner & Buchanan Broad Ripple Mortuary.

Calling from 3p.m. to 5p.m. and 7p.m. to 9p.m. today in the mortuary.

He died Thursday in Methodist Hospital. He worked 35 years for Bobbs-Merrill Division of ITT Publishing prior to retiring Jan. 1. He was a member of Northminster Presbyterian Church, Calvin Prather Masonic Lodge, Murat Shrine, Scottish Rite and Proffesional Photographers of America Association.

He was an active worker for the Republican Party and was a precinct polling judge. He was a Navy veteran of World War II, serving in the Pacific theater.

Survivors: wife, E. Louise Reed; son, Robert Reed; daughter, Terrell Lane; and parents Forrest and Kathryn Reed. Memorial contributions may be made to the American Heart Fund.
 
Reed, Robert Willis (I564)
 
1063 Rogation Sunday; Vide Burials for May 1843 No 214 page 27 Chivers, Joel (I53014)
 
1064 Roger Filer was a Fid who it seems slipped while scrambling around a low cliff face such as those in the picture on Gourlay to reach some nests of birds he was working with and fell into the sea. His body was found a few days later.

https://www.coolantarctica.com/Bases/Signy/Townsend-W-049-Rogers-Cross.php

================================

A BLAENAVON scientist who died in the Antarctic has been remembered, 50 years after his death.

After obtaining a Zoology BSc in 1959 from Swansea University, Roger Filer went to Signy Island to take part in research on the sheathbill bird, as part of the British Antarctic Survey.

It was his dedication to his work that cost him his life. He fell over a cliff, thought to have been attempting to remove chicks from their nest for measuring and ringing, in 1961.

His sister, Ann, and her husband Derek Clarke, attended a special service at St Paul's Cathedral in London, where a memorial plaque was dedicated to Mr Filer and 28 other scientists who lost their lives in the Antarctic.

At the service, director of the British Antarctic Survey Professor Nicholas Owens spoke about the contribution that those who had died had made to the scientific research programme and that they has not been forgotten.

The memorial acts as a record of how the Antarctic is now and is made out of Welsh slate.

Mrs Clarke said: "I felt very proud to see Roger honoured in such a way and I knowmy parents would have, too."

Mr Filer was born in Blaenavon, to William and Alice Filer, and attended Abersychan Grammar School.

http://www.southwalesargus.co.uk/news/9117101.Blaenavon_scientist_honoured_for_Antarctic_work/

=================================

http://www.antarctic-monument.org/index.php?page=roger-filer 
Filer, Roger (I55315)
 
1065 Role: Beneficiary Waters, Benjamin (I22235)
 
1066 Role: Beneficiary Lasbury, James (I653)
 
1067 Role: Beneficiary Waters, Rachel (I4678)
 
1068 Role: Beneficiary Waters, Thomas (I22237)
 
1069 Role: Beneficiary Waters, Sarah (I22234)
 
1070 Role: Beneficiary Lasbury, Thomas Waters (I4921)
 
1071 Role: Beneficiary Lasbury, Benjamin (I735)
 
1072 Role: Beneficiary Jones, Robert Waters (I63872)
 
1073 Role: Beneficiary Jones, Richard (I63870)
 
1074 Role: Beneficiary Derrick, Ann (I4888)
 
1075 Ronald D. Adams, 62, of 625, Midlothian Blvd., died Friday, Dec. 15, at Covenant Medical Center on Kimball Avenue of a heart attack.

He was born March 31, 1927, in Waterloo, son of Al and Bertha Kleist Adams. He married Joy Stockwell on April 9, 1955. He was the fourth generation owner of Adams Grocery Store which he had operated for the last 41 years.

Survivors include his wife; a son, Marc of Austin, Texas; four daughters, Kerrith Kern of Viroqua, Wis., Andrea Young of Nevada, Megan Adams of Iowa City, and Jennifer Adams of Waterloo; his mother of Waterloo; two sisters, Carol Brown of Cedar Rapids and Janet Adams of Denver, Colo.; and seven grandchildren.

He was preceded in death by his father and a granddaughter.

Services will be at 11 a.m. Monday at First Baptist Church, with burial in Memorial Park Cemetery. Friends may call at Locke Funeral Home from 2 to 5 p.m. today and Monday for an hour before services at the church.

Memorials may be made to the First Baptist Church.

Waterloo Courier, Sunday, December 17, 1989 
Adams, Ronald Dean (I76494)
 
1076 Ronald Leonard CHAMPION

Passed away peacefully at home on 20th January, 2023, aged 100 Years 7 Months.

He will be sadly missed every day by his wife Roma, Daughters and Sons-in-Law Judi and Joe, Sue and Rob, Grandchildren Melanie, Nick, Michelle and Chris, and Great Grandchildren Lucie, Poppy, Gino, Alana, Liam and Violet.

I thought of you today but that is nothing new, I thought of you yesterday and will tomorrow too. Remembering you is easy, I do it every day, It's just the heartache of losing you that will never go away.

Funeral Service and Cremation at Mendip Crematorium, Shepton Mallet on Wednesday 15th February at 12:30pm. Family flowers only.

Donations, if desired for St. Chads Surgery to Bryan G. Bishop Funeral Service, Farrington Road, Paulton, Bristol. BS39 7LW. 
Champion, Ronald Leonard (I38630)
 
1077 Rookwood Cemetery
Section: 3
Row: 13 
Lasbury, Ronald Thomas (I2818)
 
1078 Row 13 Lasbury, Mary Frances (I303)
 
1079 Row C Grave 34
 
Ashman, William Raymond (I35900)
 
1080 Roy Chivers, 51, a former detective constable with the Metropolitan Police's Directorate of Intelligence, was knifed in the chest as he struggled against two robbers stealing his cameras.

The father-of-two from Orpington, Kent, was visiting Kenya for the first
time. He was on a two- week holiday with his wife, Sandra, 50, at the
exclusive Aberdare Country Club, 140 miles north of the capital Nairobi. He was attacked after refusing to hand over his video camera.

Guests at the luxury safari camp found Mr Chivers covered in blood being cradled by his wife. They were flown to Nairobi hospital where Mr Chivers suffered a cardiac arrest and died.

Mrs Chivers also suffered a cut to the hand as she struggled to protect her husband from the vicious attack on Sunday.

Scotland Yard said Mr Chivers joined the Metropolitan Police in May 1966 when he was 19. In August 1979, he moved to the Directorate of Intelligence as a surveillance officer where he continued until he had completed his 30 years' service.

A senior colleague at Scotland Yard, Detective Inspector Sheridan, said:
"Roy Chivers' death came as a great shock to everybody ... He will be
greatly missed."

At Mr and Mrs Chivers' home in Orpington a family friend, David Walters, was comforting their children Steven, 20, and Helen, aged 23.

Mr Walters said: "The family are totally and utterly devastated.
That is all I can say at the moment."

Mr Walters, himself a constable in the Met, was close to tears as he
remembered the friend he had known for almost two decades.

"He was just, you know, a lovely bloke. We used to have some laughs. He'd got a good sense of humour," he said.

"We have been on holiday with him. We have been friends since we moved here 19 years ago. The kids have grown up together."

Mr Walters said Helen Chivers was intending to fly to Nairobi accompanied by Mrs Chivers' father, Norman, last night, but Steven was unable to travel because there were problems with his passport.

"I don't know when they'll be coming back, the tickets are open ended," he said.

Meanwhile, the Foreign Office in London is warning tourists to use their
"common sense" when visiting Kenya.

A spokesman said: "We are appalled by this senseless murder. Our thoughts are with the family ... We would recommend that people take a common sense approach when travelling to Kenya. Be aware when you are in possession of valuables.

"However, we don't wish to single out Kenya as a particularly troublesome spot - we don't want to panic people."

Kenya's Minister for Tourism and Wildlife, Henry Kosgey, said last night
that he would do everything in his power to bring the criminals to justice.

A reward has been offered by the Kenya Association of Tour Operators for any information leading to the arrest and conviction of Mr Chivers' attackers. Apparently two Africans who had already been convicted of murder were acquitted as there was insufficient evidence. 
Chivers, Roy B. (I35997)
 
1081 Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve - 626 Squadron Woodhouse, William Thomas (I18554)
 
1082 Royal Army Ordnance Corps - Regimental no. 048758

4th Reserve battalion - Somerset Light Infantry - Regimental no.38249

Discharged from the army on 9th November 1919 with a 20% disability. 
Jones, Arthur Thomas (I218)
 
1083 Royal Army Ordnance Corps - Regimental no. 048758

4th Reserve battalion - Somerset Light Infantry - Regimental no.38249

Discharged from the army on 9th November 1919 with a 20% disability. 
Jones, Arthur Thomas (I218)
 
1084 Run "Miss Seymours" general store. Seymour, Edith (I10620)
 
1085 Ruth Bartlett Kuykendall, 94, Englewood, and formerly of Venice, died March 20, 2002.

She was born Aug. 22, 1908, in Jackson, Mich., and came to Venice in the early 1930s. She was a licensed real estate broker for many years and was past president of American Legion Auxiliary Novel Post 159 and a charter member of Daughters of the American Revolution, both in Venice, and a member of the Magna Charta Society, Mayflower Society and Venice-Nokomis United Methodist Church.

Survivors include her husband, Kirk; sisters Lois B. Tracy and Leah B. Lasbury; and many nieces and nephews.

A celebration of life will be at 10 a.m. April 13 at Farley Funeral Home, Venice Chapel. 
Bartlett, Ruth Jane (I5289)
 
1086 Sacred to the memory of my dear husband WILLIAM JAMES VERRIER who was called to higher service April 17th 1933. ""Life's work well done, the race well run, now in God's holy keeping our loved one rests."" Also of ROSE beloved wife of WILLIAM JAMES VERRIER called home Dec 3rd 1940. ""Reunited"" vase: DAD ""Ever remembered by his loving children."" Verrier, William James (I91752)
 
1087 Sacred to the memory of my dear husband WILLIAM JAMES VERRIER who was called to higher service April 17th 1933. ""Life's work well done, the race well run, now in God's holy keeping our loved one rests."" Also of ROSE beloved wife of WILLIAM JAMES VERRIER called home Dec 3rd 1940. ""Reunited"" vase: DAD ""Ever remembered by his loving children."" Parsons, Rose (I91753)
 
1088 Sailed aboard a ship called "General Smuts" Gulliford, Nelson Gordon (I11604)
 
1089 Sailed aboard the Agapenor Lockyer, Leonard (I14067)
 
1090 Sailed aboard the Campania Button, Henry John (I11500)
 
1091 Sailed aboard the Campania Button, Walter Henry (I11499)
 
1092 Sailed aboard the Campania Young, Minnie (I11498)
 
1093 Sailed aboard the Canton Lockyer, Leonard (I14067)
 
1094 Sailed aboard the Corfu Violet Gladys (I36338)
 
1095 Sailed aboard the Corfu Lockyer, Leonard (I14067)
 
1096 Sailed aboard the Great Western McCrate, Elizabeth Annie Emeline (I3806)
 
1097 Sailed aboard the Kaisar I Hind Lockyer, Leonard (I14067)
 
1098 Sailed aboard the Lucania Nicholas, John Valentine (I52177)
 
1099 Sailed aboard the Lucania Hazell, Elizabeth Jane (I52164)
 
1100 Sailed aboard the Malwa Lockyer, Leonard (I14067)
 

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