Ann-Elizabeth STEWART

Characteristics

Type Value Date Place Sources
name Ann-Elizabeth STEWART

Events

Type Date Place Sources
death 17. January 1898
West Virginia, USA Find persons in this place
residence 1850
residence 1860
residence 1870
residence 1880
residence 1850
residence 1860
burial after 17. January 1898
Green Hill Cemetery, Martinsburg, Berkeley County, West Virginia, USA Find persons in this place
birth 21. March 1815
Inwood, Berkeley County, West Virginia, USA Find persons in this place
census 1850
Berkeley County, West Virginia, USA Find persons in this place
census 1860
Berkeley County, West Virginia, USA Find persons in this place
census 1870
West Virginia, USA Find persons in this place
census 1880
Arden, Berkeley County, West Virginia, USA Find persons in this place
marriage 1. April 1836
Berkeley, Berkeley County, West Virginia, USA Find persons in this place

??spouses-and-children_en_US??

Marriage ??spouse_en_US??Children
1. April 1836
Berkeley, Berkeley County, West Virginia, USA
Francis M. BURKHART

Sources

1 Find a Grave, https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/72860360/ann-elizabeth-burkhart
Publication: MyHeritage
  Ann Elizabeth Stewart Burkhart Birth: 21 Mar 1815 Death: 15 Jan 1898 (aged 82) Burial: Green Hill Cemetery, Martinsburg, Berkeley County, West Virginia, USA Plot: 108 Memorial ID: 72860360 Wenn es um die Verwaltung, Erstellung und Wartung der Webseite geht, wird Find A Grave weitgehend von seinem Gründer, Jim Tipton betrieben. Jim schuf die Find A Grave Website im Jahr 1995, weil er keine bestehende Website finden konnte, welche sein Hobby, den Besuch von Gräbern berühmter Persönlichkeiten, ermöglichte. Er fand, dass es viele tausend Leute auf der ganzen Welt geben würde, dieseine Interessen teilten. Was als seltsames Hobby begann, wurde zu einer Lebensaufgabe und Leidenschaft. Aufzubauen und zu sehen, wie Find A Grave über seine kühnsten Erwartungen wuchs, war für Jimungeheuer befriedigend. Jeden Tag gaben Mitwirkende aus der ganzen Welt neue Datensätze ein, tausende verwendeten die Website als Bildungs-Nachschlagewerk, lange verlorengegblaubte Verwandte wurdenwiedergefunden und Millionen von Menschenleben bleiben in guter Erinnerung. In welcher ​​anderen Art von Arbeit hätte Jim einer der letzten lebenden Munchkins getroffen, vort einer Versammlung von Grab-Enthusiasten in einem Hollywood-Mausoleum gesprochen und Schätze erworben, wie seinen antiken Sarg-Schraubendreher (nur zum Einschrauben)?
2 FamilySearch Stammbaum, https://www.myheritage.de/research/collection-40001/familysearch-stammbaum?s=138115081&itemId=290486216&action=showRecord&indId=individual-138115081-94016886
Publication: MyHeritage
  <p>Ann Elizabeth Burkhart (geb. Stewart)<br />Geburtsname: Ann Elizabeth Stewart<br />Geschlecht: weiblich<br />Geburt: 21. Mrz. 1815 - Virginia, United States<br />Heirat: 1. Apr. 1836 - Berkeley, Berkeley, Virginia, United States<br />Wohnsitz: 1850 - Berkeley county, part of, Berkeley, Virginia<br />Wohnsitz: 1860 - [Blank], Berkeley, Virginia, United States<br />Wohnsitz: 1870 - West Virginia,United States<br />Wohnsitz: 1880 - Arden, Berkeley, West Virginia, United States<br />Tod: 17. Jan. 1898 - Berkeley, West Virginia, United States<br />Vater: Robert Stewart<br />Ehemann: Francis M Burkhart<br />Kinder: Ella Alvira Virginia Emmert (geb. Burkhart), Mary Stewart, Robert C. Burkhart</p> Der FamilySearch Stammbaum wird duch MyHeritage unter Lizenz von FamilySearch International, der weltgr&ouml;ssten Genealogie Organisation, ver&ouml;ffentlicht. FamilySearch ist eine nonprofit Organisation gesponsert von der Kirche Jesu Christi der Heiligen der Letzten Tage (Mormonen Kirche).
3 Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, 1836-1922, https://www.myheritage.de/research/collection-10449/chronicling-america-historic-american-newspapers-1836-1922?itemId=11649586&action=showRecord
Publication: MyHeritage
  <p>Spirit of Jefferson<br />Ver&ouml;ffentlichung: Charles Town, Jefferson, West Virginia, USA<br />Datum: 25. Jan. 1898<br />Text: ".... The venerable Mrs. <span style="background-color: yellow; font-weight: bold; padding: 2px;">Ann</span> <span style="background-color: yellow; font-weight: bold; padding: 2px;">Burkhart</span>, relict of the late Dr. F. M. <span style="background-color: yellow; font-weight: bold; padding: 2px;">Burkhart</span>, of Darkesville, died at the home of her son in law, Mr. Elias Emmert.at Funkstown, near Hagerstown, Md., on Monday evening last ... SPIRIT OF JEFFERSON. COABLXS Tow, JatyrBRBON Couutt, W. Va. TUESDAY MORNING. JANUARY 25. 1898. E. B. Hall, a former judge of this circuit, died recently,at Santa Barbara, Cal., aged about 76 years ... man deserves to be put in marble, in bronze, and upon canvas, as well as words of highest memorial tribute, along side of those noble and gallant men who were victims of Custer's savage edict; and I ... trust that when our great Memorial Temple is ready for its heroes all of these gallant sons will be remembered." The young men referred..."<br />&Uuml;ber diese QuelleThe Spirit of Jefferson debuted July 17, 1844 in Charles Town, a community of about 1,400 inhabitants in Jefferson County, Virginia. Founder James W. Beller published the weekly newspaper for a decade, and his departure, in late 1854 or early 1855, triggered a series of editorial and publishing changes. By April 1857, Benjamin F. Beall and Thomas P. Beall were the editors and proprietors, and Benjamin became the paper&rsquo;s lone official twoyears later. Beall&rsquo;s management during the ensuing tumultuous decade ended on January 11, 1870. The new publisher John W. Dalgarn brought George William Haines into partnership. Upon Dalgarn&rsquo;s death on June 9, 1874, the newspaper&rsquo;s trustee Stephen S. Dalgarn became publisher and editor until Haines succeeded him on July 13, 1875. Haines, a Confederate veteran and prisoner of war, served until his death in April 1914. He was succeeded by his son, Clayton L. Haines.The Spirit of Jefferson supported the Democratic Party in direct competition with John S. Gallaher&rsquo;s Virginia Free Press, Charles Town&rsquo;s Whig newspaper. The politically neutral Shepherdstown Register appeared in 1849 in the town of similar size only ten miles away. Jefferson County benefited from itsShenandoah Valley location and from commercial relations in the Potomac River basin and Maryland. Its slave population was the largest in what became West Virginia. National attention focused on Jefferson County after John Brown&rsquo;s Raid on nearby Harpers Ferry and then as the arena for frequent Civil War military action.Despite its opposition to separation in the antebellum period, the Spirit changed its position soon after the February 1861 election of delegates to Virginia&rsquo;s Secession Convention. The county&rsquo;s populace later voted for secession in a referendum. The Spirit contended that the honorable position was to support resistance against the occupying Union armies. The Virginia Free Press labeled the Spirit as secessionist, and the Spirit responded by branding its rival as &ldquo;submissionist,&rdquo; a derogatory term for southerners who favored the Union.As part of the process of forming a new state, a May 1863 referendum on a new constitution determined whatcounties were to be incorporated within West Virginia. Because of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad&rsquo;s presence, Jefferson County was included. Many county citizens could not vote because of theirsecessionist activities. Although Jefferson County had nearly 2,000 pre-war voters, 248 voted for and two against joining the new state of West Virginia in the referendum on the question.After the Civil War, Virginia demanded that Jefferson, and its neighboring county Berkeley, be returned. Many residents, especially of Jefferson County, expressed their desire to be part of Virginia. In 1866 the United States by statute assented to the county&rsquo;s inclusion within West Virginia. The Spirit continued to declare its location as Virginia for nearly eight years following statehood while regularly reviling the new state and its officers. Even the Virginia Free Press declined to identify any state in its address. After a Supreme Court decision confirmed the constitutionality of West Virginia&rsquo;s statehood, the Spirit finally conceded. Dalgarn&rsquo;s editorial on March 21, 1871, announced that &ldquo;the present issue of this journal is the first time that it has recognized West Virginia as a sovereign and independent State,&rdquo; and the Spirit included &lsquo;West&rsquo; in its masthead and nameplate for the first time. Recalcitrant citizens who had followed the newspaper&rsquo;s example gradually accepted their new geographic designation, too.The Spirit of Jefferson continued to be a strong Democratic voice and has become the longest running newspaper in the state of WestVirginia</p> Zeitungen sind hervorragende Quellen für genealogische und Familienforschungs-Informationen. Geburts-, Heirats- und Todesbekanntmachungen und -anzeigen sind übliche Teile der Genealogie. Aber auch in Artikeln über lokale Nachrichten und Ereignisse können Vorfahren auftauchen (z.B. Soziales, Gemeinschaft, Schule, Sport oder geschäftsbezogene Ereignisse).
4 Maryland Zeitungen, 1790-2009, https://www.myheritage.de/research/collection-10615/maryland-zeitungen-1790-2009?itemId=285288&action=showRecord
Publication: MyHeritage
  <p>Baltimore Herald<br />Ver&ouml;ffentlichung: Baltimore, Baltimore County, MD, USA<br />Datum: 20. Jan. 1898<br />Erscheinungsh&auml;ufigkeit: Daily<br />Text: "...run into The remains of Mrs. Ann E. Burkhart were brought here today from for interment in Green Hill Cemetery. experience and ability entitled hlm to re- by the schooner Carrie. Captain Frazler ... . This first shock often does muchdamage, if the buds are much advanced. &ldquo;In the 40 years and over that I have been growing peaches. I cannot recall an Instance in which the buds have boen winter killed ... , or that the thermometer fell 10 degrees below zero to kill them (10 degrees below always kills January 10. All the low temperatures in these years that killed them havo beer, at or near the beginning of the newyear. Now... are governed by the season, as ls the wheat.&rsquo; HE HAS GONE TO MEXICO waun Contest tor the Vacancy on the Fredericksburg Birthday Generally Woman Shot nt Patton..."</p> Bevor wichtige Aufzeichnungen von Stadt-, Kreis- oder Landesregierungen aufgezeichnet wurden, veröffentlichten lokale Zeitungen häufig Artikel, in denen diese Ereignisse aufgelistet oder beschriebenwurden. Nachrufe enthalten wichtige und biographische Informationen über den Verstorbenen, aber auch über seine Familie und Verwandte.<br><br>Die Gesellschaftsseiten begannen damit, die Leser mit Klatsch und Neuigkeiten über die Reichen und Berühmten anzulocken, doch bald deckten sie auch das Treiben der "durchschnittlichen" Bürger auf. Eine unglaubliche Menge an Informationen können auf diesen Gesellschaftsseiten oder Abschnitten von scheinbar banalen Mitteilungen und Berichten über Ereignisse wie Partys, Stellenwechsel, Krankenhausaufenthalte und gesellige Besuche von Freunden oder Verwandten entdeckt werden. Diese Seiten sind eine Quelle historischer Ereignisse, die wahrscheinlich in keiner anderen Aufzeichnung existieren.<br><br>Abdeckung und Vollständigkeit in dieser Sammlungvariieren je nach Titel.
5 Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, 1836-1922, https://www.myheritage.de/research/collection-10449/chronicling-america-historic-american-newspapers-1836-1922?itemId=2676186&action=showRecord
Publication: MyHeritage
  &amp;lt;p&amp;gt;The Times&amp;lt;br /&amp;gt;Ver&ouml;ffentlichung: Washington, District of Columbia, USA&amp;lt;br /&amp;gt;Datum: 20. Jan. 1898&amp;lt;br /&amp;gt;Text: ".... Catharine AVolfinger,wife of John Wolfinger. of Mount Union, Washington county, is dead. Sirs. Elizabeth Burkhart, widow of Dr. F. SI. Burkhart, Slartinsburg, died on sronday afternoon, of pneumonia ... legislation to loot the country, that death and the judgment, politically speaking, are grave and Inexorable facts, and that they are tempting the fates and the furies in the course which they so callously ... and impudently pursue? It is easy to blow down the barrel of a shotgun! Sometimes the result is a funeral. The Congressional elections of the present year may be depended upon to point the moral and adorn thetale ... , and what did they do? By a strict party vote they killed a proposition to grant belligerent , rights to the young..."&amp;lt;br /&amp;gt;&Uuml;ber diese QuelleThe Washington Times was founded on March 18, 1894, by union printers. On July 4, 1895, owners renamed it the Morning Times. Financial difficulties, however, soon forced the printers to sell to Charles G. Conn, a Democratic congressman from Indiana. On August 5, 1895, the Evening Times was added, and the two editions sold as a combined subscription. The morning edition continued as The Times from March 12, 1897, to June 29, 1901, before being renamed the Washington Times. Conn sold the morning and evening editions in late 1896 to Washington Post founder Stilson Hutchins (1830-1912). In 1901 Frank A. Munsey (1854-1925), who was known for his consolidation practices and within the newspaper business as a destroyer of the dailies, purchased the paper and ran it from the Munsey Building, which he had built on E Street inthe northwest quadrant of the city. Munsey ceased printing the morning edition in November, 1902, and his evening and Sunday editions became known, simply, as the Washington Times (not to be confusedwith the present-day paper of the same title). Shortly after its founding, the evening edition soon became dominant, substantially surpassing the morning paper's circulation. This late afternoon edition competed with the Evening Star as the largest daily in the capital city, both of them recording a circulation of over 40,000. The politically Democratic Evening Times covered local stories as wellas foreign news culled from wire services. It often featured a society or crime article on the front page and included a daily weather map, sports, gossip, women's news, and news of sundry federal agencies and the activities of civil servants. Beginning in 1901 the newspaper also published fiction, Sunday comics, and true adventure stories. That year, advertising moved to the forefront, often appearing prominently on the front page. The newspaper claimed to have the timeliest coverage of national elections and foreign news reports. Local issues dominate the news beyond the first page, but sports and business news were also featured. The Times reported heavily on the changing landscape in Washington at the turn of the twentieth century, with frequent stories on city planning and urbanization activities, the development of the national Mall, alley and tenement reform, sanitary improvements, road building and repairs. William Randolph Hearst gained control of the Times in 1917 through hisagent Arthur Brisbane and five years later merged it with the newly acquired Washington Herald. A combined Sunday edition of both papers was published as the Washington Times-Herald in 1922 and 1923,and then a combined Sunday edition was published as the Washington Herald until 1937. A combined daily and Sunday edition, called the Washington Times-Herald, began publication February 1, 1939. Thatpaper merged with the Post in 1954&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt; Zeitungen sind hervorragende Quellen für genealogische und Familienforschungs-Informationen. Geburts-, Heirats- und Todesbekanntmachungen und -anzeigen sind übliche Teile der Genealogie. Aber auch in Artikeln über lokale Nachrichten und Ereignisse können Vorfahren auftauchen (z.B. Soziales, Gemeinschaft, Schule, Sport oder geschäftsbezogene Ereignisse).
6 FamilySearch Stammbaum, https://www.myheritage.de/research/collection-40001/familysearch-stammbaum?itemId=290486216&action=showRecord
Publication: MyHeritage
  Ann Elizabeth Burkhart (geb. Stewart)&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Geburtsname: Ann Elizabeth Stewart&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Geschlecht: weiblich&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Geburt: 21. Mrz. 1815 - Virginia, United States&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Heirat: 1. Apr. 1836 - Berkeley, Berkeley, Virginia, United States&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Wohnsitz: 1850 - Berkeley county, part of, Berkeley, Virginia&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Wohnsitz: 1860 - [Blank], Berkeley, Virginia, United States&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Wohnsitz: 1870 - West Virginia, United States&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Wohnsitz: 1880 - Arden, Berkeley, West Virginia, United States&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Tod: 17. Jan. 1898 - Berkeley, West Virginia, United States&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Erdbestattung: 1898 - Martinsburg, Berkeley, West Virginia, United States of America&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Eltern: Robert Stewart, MaryStewart (geb. Daniels)&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Ehemann: Francis M Burkhart&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Kinder: Robert C. Burkhart, Mary E. Berlin (geb. Burkhart), Ella Alvira Virginia Emmert (geb. Burkhart) Der FamilySearch Stammbaum wird duch MyHeritage unter Lizenz von FamilySearch International, der weltgr&ouml;ssten Genealogie Organisation, ver&ouml;ffentlicht. FamilySearch ist eine nonprofit Organisation gesponsert von der Kirche Jesu Christi der Heiligen der Letzten Tage (Mormonen Kirche).
7 Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, 1836-1922, https://www.myheritage.de/research/collection-10449/chronicling-america-historic-american-newspapers-1836-1922?itemId=11649586&action=showRecord
Publication: MyHeritage
  &amp;lt;p&amp;gt;Spirit of Jefferson&amp;lt;br /&amp;gt;Ver&ouml;ffentlichung: Charles Town, Jefferson, West Virginia, USA&amp;lt;br /&amp;gt;Datum: 25. Jan. 1898&amp;lt;br /&amp;gt;Text: ".... The venerable Mrs. Ann Burkhart, relict of the late Dr. F. M. Burkhart, of Darkesville, died at the home of her son in law, Mr. Elias Emmert.at Funkstown, near Hagerstown, Md., on Monday evening last ... SPIRIT OF JEFFERSON. COABLXS Tow, JatyrBRBON Couutt, W. Va. TUESDAY MORNING. JANUARY 25. 1898. E. B. Hall, a former judge of this circuit, died recently,at Santa Barbara, Cal., aged about 76 years ... man deserves to be put in marble, in bronze, and upon canvas, as well as words of highest memorial tribute, along side of those noble and gallant men who were victims of Custer's savage edict; and I ... trust that when our great Memorial Temple is ready for its heroes all of these gallant sons will be remembered." The young men referred..."&amp;lt;br /&amp;gt;&Uuml;ber diese QuelleThe Spirit of Jefferson debuted July 17, 1844 in Charles Town, a community of about 1,400 inhabitants in Jefferson County, Virginia. Founder James W. Beller published the weekly newspaper for a decade, and his departure, in late 1854 or early 1855, triggered a series of editorial and publishing changes. By April 1857, Benjamin F. Beall and Thomas P. Beall were the editors and proprietors, and Benjamin became the paper&rsquo;s lone official two years later. Beall&rsquo;s management during the ensuing tumultuous decade ended on January 11, 1870. The new publisher John W. Dalgarn brought George William Haines into partnership. Upon Dalgarn&rsquo;s death on June 9, 1874, the newspaper&rsquo;s trustee Stephen S. Dalgarn became publisher and editor until Haines succeeded him on July 13, 1875. Haines, a Confederate veteran and prisoner of war, served until his death in April 1914. He was succeeded by his son, Clayton L. Haines.The Spirit of Jefferson supported the Democratic Party in direct competition with John S. Gallaher&rsquo;s Virginia Free Press, Charles Town&rsquo;s Whig newspaper. The politically neutral Shepherdstown Register appeared in 1849 in the town of similar size only ten miles away. Jefferson County benefited from its Shenandoah Valley location and from commercial relations in the Potomac River basin and Maryland. Its slave population was the largest in what became West Virginia. National attention focused on Jefferson County after John Brown&rsquo;s Raid on nearby Harpers Ferry and then as the arena for frequent Civil War military action.Despite its opposition to separation in the antebellum period, the Spirit changed its position soon after the February 1861 election of delegates to Virginia&rsquo;s Secession Convention. The county&rsquo;s populace later voted for secessionin a referendum. The Spirit contended that the honorable position was to support resistance against the occupying Union armies. The Virginia Free Press labeled the Spirit as secessionist, and the Spirit responded by branding its rival as &ldquo;submissionist,&rdquo; a derogatory term for southerners who favored the Union.As part of the process of forming a new state, a May 1863 referendum on a newconstitution determined what counties were to be incorporated within West Virginia. Because of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad&rsquo;s presence, Jefferson County was included. Many county citizens could not vote because of their secessionist activities. Although Jefferson County had nearly 2,000 pre-war voters, 248 voted for and two against joining the new state of West Virginia in the referendumon the question.After the Civil War, Virginia demanded that Jefferson, and its neighboring county Berkeley, be returned. Many residents, especially of Jefferson County, expressed their desire to be part of Virginia. In 1866 the United States by statute assented to the county&rsquo;s inclusion within West Virginia. The Spirit continued to declare its location as Virginia for nearly eight years following statehood while regularly reviling the new state and its officers. Even the Virginia Free Press declined to identify any state in its address. After a Supreme Court decision confirmed the constitutionality of West Virginia&rsquo;s statehood, the Spirit finally conceded. Dalgarn&rsquo;s editorial on March 21, 1871, announced that &ldquo;the present issue of this journal is the first time that it has recognized West Virginia as a sovereign and independent State,&rdquo; and the Spirit included &lsquo;West&rsquo; in its masthead and nameplate for the first time. Recalcitrant citizens who had followed the newspaper&rsquo;s example gradually accepted their new geographic designation, too.The Spirit of Jefferson continued to be a strong Democratic voice and has become the longest running newspaper in the state of West Virginia&amp;lt;/p&amp;gt; Zeitungen sind hervorragende Quellen für genealogische und Familienforschungs-Informationen. Geburts-, Heirats- und Todesbekanntmachungen und -anzeigen sind übliche Teile der Genealogie. Aber auch in Artikeln über lokale Nachrichten und Ereignisse können Vorfahren auftauchen (z.B. Soziales, Gemeinschaft, Schule, Sport oder geschäftsbezogene Ereignisse).

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Title Ahnenliste der Familien Gottfried, Reuther & Krämer
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Diese Datenbank enthält auch Personen, die nicht mit mir verwandt sind. Meistens sind das Vorfahren angeheirateter Familienmitglieder. Trotz aller Akribie ist die Datenbank leider nicht fehlerfrei. Sollten ihnen Fehler oder Unstimmigkeiten auffallen, möchte ich sie um Mitteilung bitten. Die Datenbank wird laufend aktualisiert. Stand: 31.05.2025

Genealogie beginnt als Interesse, es wird ein Hobby, dreht sich zu einer Sucht, und im letzten Zustand: unheilbare Krankheit!

Id 62566
Upload date 2025-05-31 20:44:09.0
Submitter user's avatar Edgar Gottfried (von Rodinberch) visit the user's profile page
email edgar.gottfried@t-online.de
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