Paul Wright1
M, #1516, b. 1780, d. 1838
Paul Wright was born in 1780.2 He married Mary Montague, daughter of Peter Montague and Mary Smith, in 1804.1,2 Paul Wright died in 1838.2
Child of Paul Wright and Mary Montague
- Philander Montague Wright+1 b. 1805, d. 1869
Philander Montague Wright
M, #1514, b. 1805, d. 1869
Philander Montague Wright was born in 1805.1 He was the son of Paul Wright and Mary Montague.2 Philander Montague Wright married Mary Weeks Brackett, daughter of John Brackett and Eunice Clarke, in 1839 (his second wife.)2,1 Philander Montague Wright died in 1869.1
Child of Philander Montague Wright and Mary Weeks Brackett
- May Wright b. 27 May 1844, d. 22 Jul 1920
Professor Philip Quincy Wright
M, #1676, b. 28 December 1890, d. 17 October 1970
Professor Philip Quincy Wright was born on 28 December 1890 in West Medford, Massachusetts.1 He was the son of Phillip Green Wright and Elizabeth Quincy Sewall.2 Professor Philip Quincy Wright married Louise Maxey Leonard on 15 June 1922. Professor Philip Quincy Wright died on 17 October 1970 in Charlottesville, Albemarle County, Virginia, at the age of 79.3 He.
Professor of international law at the University of Virginia..
Professor of international law at the University of Virginia.
Children of Professor Philip Quincy Wright and Louise Maxey Leonard
- Rosalind Wright+2 b. 11 Oct 1923, d. 15 Apr 2021
- Christopher Wright+2 b. 31 Oct 1926, d. 9 May 1989
Phillip Green Wright1
M, #1212, b. 3 October 1861, d. 4 September 1934
Phillip Green Wright was born on 3 October 1861 in Boston, Massachusetts.2 He was the son of John Seward Wright and Mary Clark Green.3 Phillip Green Wright married Elizabeth Quincy Sewall, daughter of Joseph Sewall Sewall and Mary Vashon Wright, on 7 February 1889 in Medford, Massachusetts.2 Phillip Green Wright died on 4 September 1934 at the age of 72.4
Philip Green Wright, noted economist and former member of the Advisory Board of the Tariff Commission and of the staff of Brookings Institution. died yesterday at Garfield after an illness of several months. He was in his seventy-third year.
Dr. Wright, who made his home at Forest Olen, Md., joined the Tariff Commission in 1917, and five years later went to Brookings. He retired in 1939. Since then, he has done research work for the institute of Pacific Relations, and last year made a study for the Duke Foundation of the effect of inflation on handling of endowment funds.
He was for years a prolific writer on economic subjects and more recently had studied extensively the problems growing out of the depression. in connection with this, publishing a pamphlet on unemployment - "Outcasts of efficiency." Dr. Wright also published several volumes of poems, and aside from these labors found time to cultivate a flower garden at his home that is one of the show places of the suburbs. He served as president of the Capitol View Citizens' Association. He also was a member of the Cosmos Club.
Wright was born in Boston, the grandson of Elizur Wright, who often is called "the father of life insurance in the United States" by reason of the improvements he obtained in life insurance laws.
His early education was received in Tufts College, and then followed a year in Harvard from which he received his master's degree in 1885. Afterward Dr. Wright taught economics and mathematics at Lombard College. Galesburg. Ill., which conferred upon him the degree of LL.D. in 1930.
In 1889 Dr. Wright married Elizabeth Quincy Sewall of St. Paul who, with three sons, survives him. They are Sewall Wright, professor of genetics at the University of Chicago; Quincy Wright, professor of international law at the same institution, and Theodore Wright, manager of the Curtiss Aircraft Corp. at Buffalo. Evening Star, 5 September 1934.4
Philip Green Wright, noted economist and former member of the Advisory Board of the Tariff Commission and of the staff of Brookings Institution. died yesterday at Garfield after an illness of several months. He was in his seventy-third year.
Dr. Wright, who made his home at Forest Olen, Md., joined the Tariff Commission in 1917, and five years later went to Brookings. He retired in 1939. Since then, he has done research work for the institute of Pacific Relations, and last year made a study for the Duke Foundation of the effect of inflation on handling of endowment funds.
He was for years a prolific writer on economic subjects and more recently had studied extensively the problems growing out of the depression. in connection with this, publishing a pamphlet on unemployment - "Outcasts of efficiency." Dr. Wright also published several volumes of poems, and aside from these labors found time to cultivate a flower garden at his home that is one of the show places of the suburbs. He served as president of the Capitol View Citizens' Association. He also was a member of the Cosmos Club.
Wright was born in Boston, the grandson of Elizur Wright, who often is called "the father of life insurance in the United States" by reason of the improvements he obtained in life insurance laws.
His early education was received in Tufts College, and then followed a year in Harvard from which he received his master's degree in 1885. Afterward Dr. Wright taught economics and mathematics at Lombard College. Galesburg. Ill., which conferred upon him the degree of LL.D. in 1930.
In 1889 Dr. Wright married Elizabeth Quincy Sewall of St. Paul who, with three sons, survives him. They are Sewall Wright, professor of genetics at the University of Chicago; Quincy Wright, professor of international law at the same institution, and Theodore Wright, manager of the Curtiss Aircraft Corp. at Buffalo. Evening Star, 5 September 1934.4
Children of Phillip Green Wright and Elizabeth Quincy Sewall
- Professor Sewall Green Wright+3 b. 21 Dec 1889, d. 3 Mar 1988
- Professor Philip Quincy Wright+3 b. 28 Dec 1890, d. 17 Oct 1970
- Theodore Paul Wright+3 b. 25 May 1895, d. 21 Aug 1970
Richard Herbert Wright1
M, #2141, b. 9 August 1922, d. 5 May 1993
Richard Herbert Wright was born on 9 August 1922 in Washington, District of Columbia.2,3 He was the son of Professor Sewall Green Wright and Louise Lane Williams.1 Richard Herbert Wright died on 5 May 1993 in Sacramento County, California, at the age of 70.4
Robert Wright1
M, #2142, b. 5 June 1925, d. 16 January 1997
Of San Jose, California.2 Robert Wright was born on 5 June 1925 in District of Columbia.3 He was the son of Professor Sewall Green Wright and Louise Lane Williams.1 Robert Wright married an unknown person.1 He died on 16 January 1997 in Santa Clara, California, at the age of 71.3
Rosalind Wright1
F, #2145, b. 11 October 1923, d. 15 April 2021
Rosalind Wright was born on 11 October 1923 in Chicago, Cook County, Illinois.2,3 She was the daughter of Professor Philip Quincy Wright and Louise Maxey Leonard.1 Rosalind Wright graduated from Bryn Mawr College. She married Michael Marcus-Myers Harris on 8 March 1946. Rosalind Wright died on 15 April 2021 in Brunswick, Cumberland County, Maine, at the age of 97.
Rosalind Wright Harris, 97, died peacefully in her home in Brunswick on April 15, 2021, with her children Alison and Peter, by her side. At the end, her mind was as sharp as ever and her spirit unbowed; only her body failed her as she battled Multiple Myeloma.
Rosalind was born Oct. 11, 1923 in Chicago, Ill. to Louise Leonard Wright and Quincy Wright. Her father was a founder of the discipline of International Law and a professor at the University of Chicago. Her mother was on the national board of the League of Women Voters and served as director of two international organizations in Chicago. Rosalind graduated the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools. While there, studied for a year at the International School in Geneva, Switzerland. In 1943, she graduated from Bryn Mawr College and joined the U.S. State Department in Washington in the Public Liaison Division.
In 1945, she was a member of the six-person State Department team sent to San Francisco to organize the international conference that resulted in the creation of the United Nations. There she met Michael Marcus-Myers Harris, an architect with Harrison and Abramovitz in New York City. He joined the team to design meeting spaces for the conference. They married in Chicago in 1946 and moved to New York City. Their daughter, Alison, was born in 1947, and their son, Peter Quincy, was born a year later.
After the State Department, Rosalind worked for the Woodrow Wilson Foundation, the International Graphic Arts Society, and the American Labor Education Service. Later, she was the administrator of the Kenworthy Swift Foundation that makes grants in support of children’s mental health. She served as their administrator for 25 years until she left New York City for Maine in 2015.
Starting in the late 1950s, she became involved with many international organizations. In 1958, she joined the board of the American branch of the International Social Service. Later, she served as president of ISS-USA and on the executive committee of the international ISS organization. She was ISS’s representative to the United Nations from 1966 to 2015. She was on the executive committee for the group of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) associated with the UN, generally known as CONGO, and served twice – 19 years apart – as CONGO’s president. As president, she was instrumental in developing the model for international NGO forums held in parallel with major UN conferences, starting with the 1974 Population forum in Bucharest. Subsequently, she helped plan and run four forums focused on women in Mexico City, Copenhagen, Nairobi and Beijing, and others on Habitat (Vancouver) and on Drug Abuse and Trafficking (Vienna). She was a board member and president of the NGO Committee on UNICEF; a founder of the International Women’s Tribune Center that emerged from the 1975 women’s forum in Mexico City; a member of the UN Advisory Committee for the Unitarian-Universalist Association and other international organizations involved with child welfare, crime and drug trafficking, and women’s education and economic development. For eight years, she was president of her building’s co-op board.
In the meantime, Michael Harris became a partner in Harrison and Abramovitz and served as assistant planning director for the UN Headquarters in New York and oversaw its construction. Later, he was partner-in-charge for the design of the Dag Hammarskjöld Library at the UN; the UN Children’s School; four new buildings at Rockefeller Center; and many other significant projects in New York City and elsewhere.
Throughout Alison’s and Peter’s childhood Rosalind spent every summer with them at her parents’ summer home in Thetford, Vt., far away from the bustle of New York City. In the city and in the country, she was an exceptional cook and gracious hostess, as well as a talented seamstress, knitter and needleworker. She was an avid reader and addicted to solving New York Times crossword puzzles. Her New York City home was always open to visitors – family, friends, and friends of friends from abroad or from her children’s circles as they moved from school age to young adulthood. In 2015, after 56 years in the same apartment on 67th Street, she moved to Thornton Oaks in Brunswick.
In Maine, she was member of the Friends of Bowdoin, People Plus, the Camden Conference and the Topsham Garden Club. Until the pandemic, she regularly attended concerts and theater in Brunswick and Portland, lectures at Bowdoin College, the annual Camden Conference on international affairs, the World Affairs Conversation Group at People Plus, as well as many activities on the Thornton Oaks campus.
Rosalind was predeceased by her husband, Michael M. Harris, who died in 1982; and her brother, Christopher Wright. She is survived by her daughter, Alison Harris (Bernard Breitbart); her son, Peter Quincy Harris; her nephew and niece, Malcolm Morehead Wright and Diana Sewall Wright; three grandchildren, Michael Quincy Harris, Benjamin Parker Harris, and Margot Harris Dillon; and seven great-grandchildren, Piper, Jacob, Abigail, Elias, Quincy, James and Isaac.4
Rosalind Wright Harris, 97, died peacefully in her home in Brunswick on April 15, 2021, with her children Alison and Peter, by her side. At the end, her mind was as sharp as ever and her spirit unbowed; only her body failed her as she battled Multiple Myeloma.
Rosalind was born Oct. 11, 1923 in Chicago, Ill. to Louise Leonard Wright and Quincy Wright. Her father was a founder of the discipline of International Law and a professor at the University of Chicago. Her mother was on the national board of the League of Women Voters and served as director of two international organizations in Chicago. Rosalind graduated the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools. While there, studied for a year at the International School in Geneva, Switzerland. In 1943, she graduated from Bryn Mawr College and joined the U.S. State Department in Washington in the Public Liaison Division.
In 1945, she was a member of the six-person State Department team sent to San Francisco to organize the international conference that resulted in the creation of the United Nations. There she met Michael Marcus-Myers Harris, an architect with Harrison and Abramovitz in New York City. He joined the team to design meeting spaces for the conference. They married in Chicago in 1946 and moved to New York City. Their daughter, Alison, was born in 1947, and their son, Peter Quincy, was born a year later.
After the State Department, Rosalind worked for the Woodrow Wilson Foundation, the International Graphic Arts Society, and the American Labor Education Service. Later, she was the administrator of the Kenworthy Swift Foundation that makes grants in support of children’s mental health. She served as their administrator for 25 years until she left New York City for Maine in 2015.
Starting in the late 1950s, she became involved with many international organizations. In 1958, she joined the board of the American branch of the International Social Service. Later, she served as president of ISS-USA and on the executive committee of the international ISS organization. She was ISS’s representative to the United Nations from 1966 to 2015. She was on the executive committee for the group of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) associated with the UN, generally known as CONGO, and served twice – 19 years apart – as CONGO’s president. As president, she was instrumental in developing the model for international NGO forums held in parallel with major UN conferences, starting with the 1974 Population forum in Bucharest. Subsequently, she helped plan and run four forums focused on women in Mexico City, Copenhagen, Nairobi and Beijing, and others on Habitat (Vancouver) and on Drug Abuse and Trafficking (Vienna). She was a board member and president of the NGO Committee on UNICEF; a founder of the International Women’s Tribune Center that emerged from the 1975 women’s forum in Mexico City; a member of the UN Advisory Committee for the Unitarian-Universalist Association and other international organizations involved with child welfare, crime and drug trafficking, and women’s education and economic development. For eight years, she was president of her building’s co-op board.
In the meantime, Michael Harris became a partner in Harrison and Abramovitz and served as assistant planning director for the UN Headquarters in New York and oversaw its construction. Later, he was partner-in-charge for the design of the Dag Hammarskjöld Library at the UN; the UN Children’s School; four new buildings at Rockefeller Center; and many other significant projects in New York City and elsewhere.
Throughout Alison’s and Peter’s childhood Rosalind spent every summer with them at her parents’ summer home in Thetford, Vt., far away from the bustle of New York City. In the city and in the country, she was an exceptional cook and gracious hostess, as well as a talented seamstress, knitter and needleworker. She was an avid reader and addicted to solving New York Times crossword puzzles. Her New York City home was always open to visitors – family, friends, and friends of friends from abroad or from her children’s circles as they moved from school age to young adulthood. In 2015, after 56 years in the same apartment on 67th Street, she moved to Thornton Oaks in Brunswick.
In Maine, she was member of the Friends of Bowdoin, People Plus, the Camden Conference and the Topsham Garden Club. Until the pandemic, she regularly attended concerts and theater in Brunswick and Portland, lectures at Bowdoin College, the annual Camden Conference on international affairs, the World Affairs Conversation Group at People Plus, as well as many activities on the Thornton Oaks campus.
Rosalind was predeceased by her husband, Michael M. Harris, who died in 1982; and her brother, Christopher Wright. She is survived by her daughter, Alison Harris (Bernard Breitbart); her son, Peter Quincy Harris; her nephew and niece, Malcolm Morehead Wright and Diana Sewall Wright; three grandchildren, Michael Quincy Harris, Benjamin Parker Harris, and Margot Harris Dillon; and seven great-grandchildren, Piper, Jacob, Abigail, Elias, Quincy, James and Isaac.4
Professor Sewall Green Wright1
M, #1675, b. 21 December 1889, d. 3 March 1988
Professor Sewall Green Wright was born on 21 December 1889 in Melrose, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, (only the Massachusetts Births transcription gives 23 December.)2,3 He was the son of Phillip Green Wright and Elizabeth Quincy Sewall.1 Professor Sewall Green Wright graduated in 1912 from University of Chicago. He married Louise Lane Williams, daughter of F.M. Williams and Clara Lane, on 10 September 1921 in Licking County, Ohio.4 Professor Sewall Green Wright died on 3 March 1988 in Madison, Wisconsin, at the age of 98 from complications after fracturing his pelvis.
Children of Professor Sewall Green Wright and Louise Lane Williams
- Richard Herbert Wright1 b. 9 Aug 1922, d. 5 May 1993
- Robert Wright+1 b. 5 Jun 1925, d. 16 Jan 1997
Theodore Paul Wright1
M, #1677, b. 25 May 1895, d. 21 August 1970
Theodore Paul Wright was born on 25 May 1895 in Galesburg, Illinois.2,3 He was the son of Phillip Green Wright and Elizabeth Quincy Sewall.1 Theodore Paul Wright married Margaret McCarl, daughter of Lyman McCarl and Hannah M. Berrian, on 4 December 1918 in Quincy, Adams County, Illinois.4 Theodore Paul Wright died on 21 August 1970 in Ithaca, New York, at the age of 75.
His biography is to be found in theHarvard Square Library and is buried in Oak Grove Cemetery, Medford, Middlesex County, Massachusetts.5
His biography is to be found in theHarvard Square Library and is buried in Oak Grove Cemetery, Medford, Middlesex County, Massachusetts.5
Child of Theodore Paul Wright and Margaret McCarl
- Douglas Lyman Wright+1 b. 18 Aug 1920, d. 27 Aug 1991
Citations
- [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
- [S208] 1900 US Census, IL KNOX 4-WD GALESBURG 1900.
- [S210] Social Security Death Index.
- [S89] Family Search, Illinois, County Marriages, 1810-1940.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "Memorial # 240712037, Theodore Paul Wright, includes gravestone photograph."
Virginia L. Wright1
F, #22217
Child of Virginia L. Wright and Benjamin Alonzo Ray
- Lottie Mary Ray1 b. 16 Aug 1874, d. 23 Dec 1957
Citations
- [S89] Family Search, Massachusetts Marriages, 1695-1910.
Dorothy Beatrice C. Wrigley1
F, #2457, b. September 1901, d. 1964
Dorothy Beatrice C. Wrigley's birth was registered in the quarter ending September 1901 in the Chepstow, Monmouthshire, registration district.1 She married Lt. Col. Russell Durnford Ross, son of Andrew Guy Ross and Evelyn St. Lo Durnford, on 2 June 1928 in Cirencester, Gloucestershire.2 Dorothy Beatrice C. Wrigley died in 1964.3
Elizabeth Wroth
F, #23950, d. 14 August 1613 or 1614
Elizabeth Wroth married firstly George Mynne. Elizabeth Wroth died on 14 August 1613 or 1614.
Child of Elizabeth Wroth and George Mynne
- Anne Mynne b. 20 Nov 1579, d. 8 Aug 1622
Hugh de Wrottesley1
M, #18436, b. 1369, d. before 9 November 1370
Hugh de Wrottesley was born in 1369.2 He was the son of Sir Hugh de Wrottesley KG and Mabel verch Philip ap Rees.2 Hugh de Wrottesley died before 9 November 1370.2
Sir Hugh de Wrottesley KG1
M, #18435, b. 1314, d. 28 January 1381
Sir Hugh de Wrottesley KG was born in 1314.2 He married secondly Mabel verch Philip ap Rees, daughter of Sir Philip ap Rees and Joan (Unknown), before 1366.1,3 Sir Hugh de Wrottesley KG died on 28 January 1381.4
Child of Sir Hugh de Wrottesley KG and Mabel verch Philip ap Rees
- Hugh de Wrottesley1 b. 1369, d. b 9 Nov 1370
Citations
- [S144] William Salt Archaeological Society, Staffordshire Historical Collections, Vol. 6. Part II. New Series. p. 141. Wrottesley of Wrottesley.
- [S144] William Salt Archaeological Society, Staffordshire Historical Collections, Vol. 6. Part II. New Series. p. 91. Wrottesley of Wrottesley.
- [S551] Falnoner Madan, Gresleys of Drakelow, p. 299.
- [S144] William Salt Archaeological Society, Staffordshire Historical Collections, Vol. 6. Part II. New Series. p. 154. Wrottesley of Wrottesley.
(unknown) Wyatt1
F, #3363
Citations
- [S24] Sarah Elizabeth Titcomb, Early New England People, p. 173.
Judith Wyatt
F, #23921
Judith Wyatt married Jacob Hancock.
Child of Judith Wyatt and Jacob Hancock
- Smith M. Hancock+ b. c 28 Aug 1821, d. 27 May 1897
Elizabeth Wydville1
F, #11781
Child of Elizabeth Wydville and King Edward IV
- Elizabeth of York+ b. 11 Feb 1466, d. 11 Feb 1503
Citations
- [S147] Alison Weir, Britain's Royal Families, p. 151.
Martha Wyeth1
F, #5009
Child of Martha Wyeth and Rev. William Fessenden
Citations
- [S18] Various editors, Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans.
Marion Wyld1
F, #8474
Child of Marion Wyld and Edward Osler
Citations
- [S79] Edward Marion Chadwick, Ontarian Families, Vol. II p. 126.
Barbara (Julia) Wylie1,2
F, #19152, b. 1874
Barbara (Julia) Wylie was born in 1874 in Bothwell, Tasmania.1 She was the daughter of David Wylie.2 Barbara (Julia) Wylie married Arthur Dean Beecroft, son of William James Beecroft and Kate Dean, on 31 August 1896 in Apsley, Tasmania.2
Children of Barbara (Julia) Wylie and Arthur Dean Beecroft
- Kate Audrey Beecroft1 b. 1897
- Alma Devina Beecroft1 b. 1899
- Arthur Dean Beecroft3 b. 1905, d. 1913
Citations
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://portal.archives.tas.gov.au/
- [S205] Newspaper, The Mercury (Hobart, Tas.), 5 September 1896.
- [S232] Ancestry.com, Australia Birth Index, 1788-1922.
David Wylie1
M, #22737
Child of David Wylie
- Barbara (Julia) Wylie+1 b. 1874
Citations
- [S205] Newspaper, The Mercury (Hobart, Tas.), 5 September 1896.
Russell Allen Wylie1
M, #23669, b. 27 March 1904, d. April 1985
Russell Allen Wylie was born on 27 March 1904 in New York.2,3 He married Harriet Maxine Sewall, daughter of Samuel Egbert Sewall and Mabel Caroline Johnson, in 1928 in Medford, Massachusetts.1 Russell Allen Wylie died in April 1985 in New York at the age of 813 and is buried in Memory Gardens Cemetery and Memorial Park, Colonie, Albany County, New York.4
Citations
- [S89] Family Search, Massachusetts, Marriage Index, 1901-1955 and 1966-1970.
- [S585] 1940 US Census, Gloversville, Fulton, New York.
- [S210] Social Security Death Index.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "#227235078."
Joanna Charlotte Wyman1
F, #24165, b. 12 June 1935, d. 13 January 2012
Joanna Charlotte Wyman was born on 12 June 1935 in Boston, Massachusetts.1,2 She married Richard Lang Sewall, son of Dr. Weston Fullerton Sewall and Ruth R. Lang, in 1955 in Monroe, Florida.3 Joanna Charlotte Wyman died on 13 January 2012 in Pembroke, Massachusetts, at the age of 761 and is buried in Center Cemetery, Pembroke, Plymouth County, Massachusetts.4
Joanna C. (Wyman) Sewall, age 76, of Pembroke, died at her home, Friday, Jan. 13, 2012.
Born in Boston, Joanna lived her entire life in Pembroke, growing up on West Elm St., before moving to her home on Center St. She was an active member of the First Church of Pembroke for many years and worked at the Pembroke Post Office for many years as a mail carrier. Joanna loved spending time with her family and cats. She also enjoyed gardening. Joanna was the beloved wife of the late Richard Sewall; devoted mother of James Richard Sewall and his wife Carol of MD, William Lang Sewall of Plymouth, Barbara Ann Reed and her husband William of Pembroke, Harold Dean Sewall and his wife Kim of CA and Ericjohn Sewall and his wife Sherri of Pembroke; loving grandmother of Philip, Julia, John, Chad, Jenna, Joanne, Greg, Lucas, Emily and great-grandmother of Hayley and Daylen; dear sister of William "Ritchie" Wyman of Pembroke and John H. Wyman of Boston. Calling hours at the Shepherd Funeral Home, 7 Mattakeesett St., (Rte. 14), Pembroke, Monday, Jan. 16, from 4-8 p. m. Her funeral service will be held at the First Church of Pembroke, 105 Center St., Pembroke, Tuesday, Jan. 17 at 9:30 a. m. Interment will follow at the Center Cemetery, Pembroke.5
Joanna C. (Wyman) Sewall, age 76, of Pembroke, died at her home, Friday, Jan. 13, 2012.
Born in Boston, Joanna lived her entire life in Pembroke, growing up on West Elm St., before moving to her home on Center St. She was an active member of the First Church of Pembroke for many years and worked at the Pembroke Post Office for many years as a mail carrier. Joanna loved spending time with her family and cats. She also enjoyed gardening. Joanna was the beloved wife of the late Richard Sewall; devoted mother of James Richard Sewall and his wife Carol of MD, William Lang Sewall of Plymouth, Barbara Ann Reed and her husband William of Pembroke, Harold Dean Sewall and his wife Kim of CA and Ericjohn Sewall and his wife Sherri of Pembroke; loving grandmother of Philip, Julia, John, Chad, Jenna, Joanne, Greg, Lucas, Emily and great-grandmother of Hayley and Daylen; dear sister of William "Ritchie" Wyman of Pembroke and John H. Wyman of Boston. Calling hours at the Shepherd Funeral Home, 7 Mattakeesett St., (Rte. 14), Pembroke, Monday, Jan. 16, from 4-8 p. m. Her funeral service will be held at the First Church of Pembroke, 105 Center St., Pembroke, Tuesday, Jan. 17 at 9:30 a. m. Interment will follow at the Center Cemetery, Pembroke.5
Citations
- [S205] Newspaper, The Pariot Ledger, 14 January 2012.
- [S210] Social Security Death Index.
- [S232] Ancestry.com, Florida Marriage Indexes, 1822-1875 and 1927-2001.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "Memorial # 83396550, Joanna C. Wyman Sewall, showing gravestone photograph."
- [S205] Newspaper, The Patriot Ledger, 14 January 2012.
Mary Wynard
F, #13294, d. 27 October 1784
Mary Wynard married John West, 2nd Earl De La Warr, son of John West 7th Lord, 1st Earl de La Warr and Charlotte McCarthy, on 8 August 1756. Mary Wynard died on 27 October 1784.
Child of Mary Wynard and John West, 2nd Earl De La Warr
- Hon. Frederick West+ b. 1767, d. 1852
Agnes Wyndham
F, #8359, b. 17 June 1862
Agnes Wyndham was born on 17 June 1862.1 She was the daughter of Alfred Wyndham and Caroline Elizabeth Stuart.
Citations
- [S226] 1901 Canadian Census.
Alexander Wyndham
M, #8353, b. 27 June 1860
Alexander Wyndham was born on 27 June 1860.1 He was the son of Alfred Wyndham and Caroline Elizabeth Stuart.
Citations
- [S226] 1901 Canadian Census.
Alfred Wyndham
M, #8352, b. 4 November 1836
Of West Lodge, somewhere in Dorset; afterwards of Keswick, York County, Ontario and later of Gleichen, Alberta. He was Lt. Colonel 12th York Rangers, served in the North-West, 1885 as second in command of Midland Provisional Battalion. Alfred Wyndham was born on 4 November 1836.1 He married Caroline Elizabeth Stuart, daughter of John Stuart and Elizabeth Van Rensselaer Powell, on 1 June 1859 in Toronto, Ontario.2
Children of Alfred Wyndham and Caroline Elizabeth Stuart
- Ethel Wyndham
- Julia Wyndham
- Mary Wyndham
- Alexander Wyndham b. 27 Jun 1860
- Agnes Wyndham b. 17 Jun 1862
- Trevelyan Wyndham b. Apr 1864
- Ernest Wyndham b. 27 Feb 1868
- Spencer Wyndham b. 25 Dec 1871
- Beatrice Wyndham b. 7 Jun 1874
- Charles W. Wyndham b. 18 May 1875
- John Wyndham b. 3 Sep 1880
Beatrice Wyndham
F, #8361, b. 7 June 1874
Beatrice Wyndham was born on 7 June 1874.1 She was the daughter of Alfred Wyndham and Caroline Elizabeth Stuart.
Citations
- [S226] 1901 Canadian Census.
Charles W. Wyndham
M, #8357, b. 18 May 1875
Charles W. Wyndham was born on 18 May 1875.1 He was the son of Alfred Wyndham and Caroline Elizabeth Stuart.
Citations
- [S226] 1901 Canadian Census.