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101 Car accident Obama, Barack Hussein (I2307)
 
102 Carter's Sta., Johnson, Andrew (I1450)
 
103 City Cemetery Johnson, Jacob (I1461)
 
104 Colonel Washington, John (I403)
 
105 Conceived the idea of the thousands of flowering Japanese cherry trees in
Potomac Park. 
Herron, Helen Nellie (I1958)
 
106 Connecticut. Church Records Index. Connecticut State Library, Hartford, Connecticut. Source (S87)
 
107 Cowden Cemetery Johnson, Rosa L (I2147)
 
108 Data compiled by Historical Data Systems of Kingston, MA from the following list of works.

Copyright 1997-2009
Historical Data Systems, Inc.
PO Box 35
Duxbury, MA 02331.

 
Source (S5)
 
109 Data compiled by Historical Data Systems of Kingston, MA from the following list of works. Copyright 1997-2000. Historical Data Systems, Inc.
PO Box 35
Duxbury, MA 02331. 
Source (S3)
 
110 date not certain Nixon, Walter Wadsworth (I2241)
 
111 Dean of Carlisle Very, Robert Hodgson (I560)
 
112 Defeated Adlai E. Stevenson in the 1952 and 1956 elections. The 1952 popular
vote was 33,936,234 to 27,314,992, the electoral vote 442 to 89. The 1956
votes were 35,590,472 to 26,022,752 and 457 to 73 (one democratic elector
voted for Walter B. Jones of Alabama). His vice-president was the 37th
president, Richard M. Nixon, who lost the close 1960 election to John F.
Kennedy. Eisenhower was Supreme Allied Commander to Europe during WW II.
Called "Ike". 
Eisenhower, Dwight David (I1488)
 
113 Derbyshire Church of England Parish Registers, Derbyshire Record Office, Matlock, Derbyshire, England. Source (S66)
 
114 Dodd, Jordan, comp.. Georgia Marriages to 1850. Electronic transcription of marriage records held by the individual counties in Georgia. Source (S39)
 
115 Dodd, Jordan, comp.. Tennessee Marriages to 1825. Electronic transcription of marriage records held by the individual counties in Tennessee. Source (S86)
 
116 Dodd, Jordan, comp.. Virginia Marriages to 1800. Electronic transcription of marriage records held by the individual counties in Virginia. Source (S37)
 
117 Dodd, Jordan, Liahona Research, comp.. Maryland Marriages, 1655-1850. Most of the records in this index may be found at the Maryland Historical Society or the Family History Library. More specific source information is listed with each entry. Original marriage licenses should be located at the county clerk's office. Source (S59)
 
118 Dodd, Jordan. Missouri Marriages to 1850. Electronic transcription of marriage records held by the individual counties in Missouri. Source (S78)
 
119 Ebenezer Methodist Cemetery Nixon, Samuel Brady (I188)
 
120 Ebenezer Methodist Cemetery Wadsworth, Sarah Ann (I189)
 
121 Elected in 1848 over Lewis Cass by a popular vote of 1,360,967 to 1,222,342
and an electoral vote of 163 to 127. Chose Millard Fillmore as vice-president.
Died in office, while Congress was in session.
Was a second cousin of James Madison. 
Taylor, Zachary (I1779)
 
122 Esther Elvira Baum died "during the Civil War" according to
the obituary of her son Henry Patton Foote Blythe. 
Baum, Esther Elvira (I25)
 
123 Family trees submitted by Ancestry members. Source (S23)
 
124 Fifth Census of the United States, 1830. (NARA microfilm publication M19, 201 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Source (S79)
 
125 Filby, P. William, ed. Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s. Farmington Hills, MI, USA: Gale Research, 2012. Source (S36)
 
126 Fragile and petite, she was a cashier in her father's bank when she met
McKinley, thus making her the first career woman to become First Lady.
Because she was nearly an invalid, Mrs. Garret A. Hobart, wife of the vice-
president, performed many of the duties in the White House as "Second Lady". 
Saxon, Ida (I2264)
 
127 French Huguenot settler of Elizabeth City, Charles City
and York, VA 
Martiau, Nicholas (I425)
 
128 From Find A Grave

At the age of 16 Nan developed an obsession with her father's friend, Warren Gamaliel Harding. Reports state that many pictures of the future president adorned the walls of her bedroom, and that she would wait for hours outside of his office at Marion Daily Star building. In 1914, after graduation from high school, Nan moved to New York, hoping to begin a secretarial career. At this time she also claims to have began an affair with the future president which continued throughout his presidency. As a result of the affair, a daughter,Elizabeth, was born in 1919. Harding allegedly promised to support the daughter,but after his death in 1923, his wife, Florence, who vehemently denied any claims made by Nan, refused to honor the obligation. In 1928, a nearly destitute Nan Britton, wrote a book entitled The President's Daughter, considered by many to be the first kiss and tell book. According to the New York Times, August 13, 2015 DNA confirms that Nan Britton's daughter, Elizabeth, was indeed fathered by Warren Harding, and the Harding Blaesing families jointly announced that paternity has been proven via DNA comparisons.

(Nan Britton died in 1991 in Sandy, Oregon, where she had lived during the last years of her life.[1] She insisted until her death that Harding was her daughter's father, a fact that was confirmed by DNA testing decades later, in 2015.[1]
 
Britton, Nanna Popham (I1992)
 
129 From Find A Grave

Father: Thomas Arbuthnot Mercer
Mother: Elizabeth Barnes

Calendar of Wills
Marcer, Robert, Cecil Co., 16 July 1769-23 Aug. 1769
Wife: Ann
Children: Thomas, James Ann Caulk, Rebecca, John, Frances, Elizabeth and Sarah Hull.
Grandchildren: John Marcer, son of son, Robert; Robert and Elizabeth Smith, Friend John Boulton, guardian of son John (if wife dies)
Tracts: Larrimore's Neck, Mountsfield, Addition and Barbadoes.
Ex. Wife Ann, Wit: William Ward, Augustine Hendrickson, John Ward, son of John

Guardian bond for Ann Marcer, ex. of Robert Marcer, signed by Ann Marcer, William Ward and John Ward Jr.
20 Sep. 1769, 1500 pounds.

11 June 1767. Thomas Etherington, farmer to Robert Marcer, farmer, 25.12.6 pounds, Etherington's Chance, which adjoins Benjamin Etherington's fence, 10.25 acres (Mark) (No wife's acknowledgment).

11 June 1767, Robert Marcer, farmer, to Thomas Etherington, farmer. 50.12.6 pounds, part of Indian Range,
adjoining Sewell, division line between Henry Hendrickson and Robert Marcer, branch of Back Creek, Benjamin
Etherington's fence, 20.25 acres. (No wife's acknowledgment).
Mercer (Marcer), Robert, Age 60 in 1764 as deponent CE 2:141-142.

Made a vestryman of St. Stephens in 1737. In 1745 records show that pews were appropriated to Thomas, Robert and John Mercer.

Debt Books show that Robert Mercer (Marcer) paid rent on Barbadoes, Indian Range, Mountsfield, Addition to Mount Herman,
Herman's Mount, Mountsfield Addition and Larramore's Neck 1734-66.
Sources:
Title: Ancestors of American Presidents
Author: Gary Boyd Roberts
Publication: Published in cooperation with the New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, Massachusetts by Carl Boyer,
3rd., Santa Clarita, Calif. 1995
Note: Property of Annora B. Renoe
Media: Book
Sources:
Title: St. Stephen's, North Sassafras Parish, register
Early Anglican Records of Cecil Co.
Title: Cecil County Wills
Page: Book BB-2-319, 1769
Maryland Marriages 1634-1777, compiled by Robert Barnes, Gen Pub. Co Inc, Baltim

Bush’s long-ago Walker-and-related forebears, along with some of their cousins and in-laws, owned plantations and farms at Sassafras Neck in Cecil County, Md. This is a narrow strip of land between the Bohemia and Sassafras rivers, which flow into Chesapeake Bay.
The pages of the nation’s earliest Census enumerations offer this testimony, which has been independently compiled:
• Robert and Ann (Bolton) Mercer owned slaves.
They were fifth great-grandparents of the president and great-grandparents of Bloomington’s Judge David Davis, who helped put Abraham Lincoln in the White House.
In 1790, there was an Ann Mercer in Cecil County at the West Sassafras Hundred election district. She headed a household of one free white male age 16 or over, one free white male under 16, two free white females, and five slaves. Mercer had been widowed for about two decades.
 
Mercer, Robert (I746)
 
130 From find A Grave

This Deborah has been detached from incorrect parents Samuel Buel and Deborah Griswold. They already have a well-documented daughter with the same name who married Nathaniel Porter, and their daughter cannot be this Deborah Buell who married Simon Newcomb. That Deborah Buell died in 1710. This Deborah Newconb died in 1756.
Some genealogies show her as Deborah Lathrop, daughter of Samuel Lothrop and Elizabeth Scudder. Others show her as daughter of Samuel Buell and Deborah Griswold. The Newcomb Family Association[1] follows the work of John Bearse Newcomb, which regards her last name as Unknown. If there is any other supporting evidence of her birth name or family tree, even if disputed or circumstantial or uncertain, please let me know. (From Wiki Tree: https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Buell-108) 
Buell, Deborah (I868)
 
131 Gale Research Company. Biography and Genealogy Master Index. Detroit, MI, USA: Gale Research Company, 2008. Source (S48)
 
132 Garfield Memor.,Lakeview Cemetery, Rudolph, Lucretia (I1893)
 
133 Genealogical Card File. Lancaster Mennonite Historical Society, Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Source (S28)
 
134 Genealogical Society of Utah. British Isles Vital Records Index, 2nd Edition. Salt Lake City, Utah: Intellectual Reserve, copyright 2002. Used by permission. Source (S33)
 
135 Glen Dyberry Cemetery Lord, Russell Farnham (I2272)
 
136 Godfrey Memorial Library. American Genealogical-Biographical Index. Middletown, CT, USA: Godfrey Memorial Library. Source (S21)
 
137 Graduated Whittier College 1934, graduated Duke Law School 1937, Congressman,
Senator, Vice-President. Was elected over Hubert Humphrey and George C.
Wallace in 1968 by a popular vote of 31,785,480 to 31,275,166 and 9,906,473,
and an electoral vote of 301 to 191 and 46. Spiro T. Agnew was his vice-
president during his first term. Reelected in 1972 over George S. McGovern
and John J. Schmitz by votes of 47,170,179 to 29,171,791 and 1,090,673, and
520 to 17 and 0. Now his successor Gerald R. Ford became vice-president. 
Nixon, Richard Milhous (I183)
 
138 Had fallen into dissipation and debt. Committed suicide. Adams, George Washington (I2019)
 
139 Hancock Cemetery Adams, Abigail Amelia (I1998)
 
140 Hattie Hayes has conflicting dates and places of birth.
Her death certificate says that she was born 26 July 1863
which is clearly impossible as her son Robert E. Ayers
reported in 1900 that his date of birth was Feb. 1871.
In the 1900 U.S. census her middle initial was "A" but
the 1870 U.S. census reports a Hattie J. Ayers aged 19, 
Hayes, Hattie (I18)
 
141 He served as a Private in H 23 Mississippi Infantry, C.S.A.,
enlisting 19 Sep 1861 and served until discharged from a
Union prison 19 June 1865. With his regiment he was captured
at the Battle of Fort Donelson, 19 feb. 1862; exchanged
at Vicksburg 3 Sep 1862 and captured near Nashville 15 Dec 1864.
Both times he was imprisoned at Camp Douglas near Chicago. 
Hines, John F. (I27)
 
142 Hereditary Lay Abbot of Dunkeld Thane, Crinan The (I477)
 
143 Heritage Consulting. The Millennium File. Salt Lake City, UT, USA: Heritage Consulting. Source (S2)
 
144 Hunting For Bears, comp.. Mississippi Marriages, 1776-1935. Mississippi marriage information taken from county courthouse records. Many of these records were extracted from copies of the original records in microfilm, microfiche, or book format, located at the Family History Library. Source (S55)
 
145 Illegitimate daughter Scotland, Isabel of (I669)
 
146 In a different publication called Martha Skelton. Wayles, Martha Skelton (I2026)
 
147 In the 1900 census, he is listed as Lemar N. Grisham with
a date of birth of Sept. 1879. 
Grisham, Lemma Newell (I22)
 
148 Index to Marriages, New York City Clerk's Office, New York, New York. Source (S51)
 
149 Index to New York City Marriages, 1866-1937. Indices prepared by the Italian Genealogical Group and the German Genealogy Group, and used with permission of the New York City Department of Records/Municipal Archives. Source (S89)
 
150 Jacob Johnson was the father of Andrew Johnson, the 17th President of the United States.

His date of birth is believed to be around 1778. Some sources indicate that he was born in Newcastle, England and sailed to America around 1795; but other sources indicate that he was born in Raleigh, North Carolina, and that it was his grandfather (and possible namesake) who sailed to North America from England.

Historian Rev. Nash A. Odom writes that "In the year 1760, Peter Johnson, migrated from Kintyre Scotland to North Carolina with his large family and settled in Cumberland County. The preaching instinct broke out again and a number of the Johnsons became ministers. One was the father of Jacob Johnson, who moved to Raleigh, North Carolina and was the father of President Andrew Johnson." Author Billy Kennedy writes that Jacob's father, named Andrew, a Presbyterian, came to North Carolina about 1750 from Mounthill, Ireland.

Whatever his beginnings, it is known Jacob was in Raleigh, NC in the early 1800's. On September 9, 1801, 23-year old Jacob married Mary "Polly" McDonough and together would have 3 children: William Patterson Johnson (1804-1865), Elizabeth Johnson (1806-unknown), and Andrew Johnson (December 29, 1808-July 31, 1875). Andrew is said to have been named after his uncle or grandfather, Andrew McDonough.

The Johnson family lived humbly in a log home located on the property owned by Casso's Inn, a popular antebellum inn located northeast of the present-day North Carolina State Capital building. Casso's Inn was run by Peter Casso, a Revolutionary War soldier. Mary worked as a weaver and clothes washer, and Jacob worked as a hostler. Jacob also served as a militia Captain of Muster Division 20, as a sexton for the Presbyterian Church, and as a porter for the State Bank of North Carolina (chartered in 1811). Jacob is also reported to have been the sole bell toller in Raleigh.

Jacob died a hero's death at age 34, when he valiantly saved two fisherman whose boat had capsized. It was December, 1811, and Colonel Thomas Henderson, the young editor of the Raleigh Star, and his friend Mr. Callum, were fishing on Walnut Creek, near Hunter's Mill, when the enthusiastic group of fishermen capsized their fishing skiff. (A third occupant of the skiff, Mr. Pearce, had no trouble getting to shore.) Jacob Johnson jumped in the water and saved Henderson and Callum, to the detriment of his own health. Jacob died several weeks later, ironically, while ringing the funeral bell at church.

His obituary from the Raleigh Star newspaper (dated January 10, 1812) read as follows:

"Died, in this city, on Saturday last, Jacob Johnson, who had for years occupied a humble but useful station in Society. He was a city constable, sexton, and porter of the State Bank. In his last illness he was visited by the principal inhabitants of the city, by all whom he was esteemed for his honesty, industry, and humane and friendly disposition. Among all whom he was known and esteemed none lament him more (except, perhaps, his relatives) than the publisher of this paper; for he owes his life, on a particular occasion, to the boldness and humanity of Johnson."

Jacob's grave remained unmarked until 1867, when the current marker was erected. The writing on the marker has been obliterated from weather and vandalism, but an early account indicates that it was inscribed as follows:

"In memory of Jacob Johnson. An honest man, loved and respected by all who knew him."

Then-president Andrew Johnson was invited by Raleigh Mayor William D. Haywood to attend the public erection of Jacob's monument. He agreed to attend the dedication; this marked Johnson's only trip to the south during his term as President. He departed Washington, DC on June 1, 1867, stayed at Richmond, Virginia on the 2nd, and arrived in Raleigh on the 3rd. Johnson stayed at the Yarborough House Hotel on Fayetteville Street during his stay, and delivered a lengthy speech about various topics shortly after arriving.

The childhood home of President Johnson home (shown here), where his parents raised him, is now preserved at Mordecai Historic Park in Raleigh, North Carolina. 
Johnson, Jacob (I1461)
 

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