Chester County Marriages Bride Index 1885-1930

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Chester County Marriages Bride Index 1885-1930 Chester County Marriages Bride Index 1885-1930 Bride's Last Name Bride's First Name Bride's Middle Bride's Date of Birth Bride's Age Groom's First Groom's Last Date of Application Date of Marriage Place of Marriage License # Saalbach Anna CSeptember 16, 1877 Frank Pawling November 20, 1901 Sadsburyville 8707 Saalbach ClaraJuly 13, 1876 Philip Wagner July 7, 1906 Philadelphia 11977 Sabados Elizabeth 17 Joseph Gumbos November 4, 1929 Phoenixville 29707 Sabatini Frances 19 John Cicarone February 21, 1927 West Chester 26974 Sabau VeraAugust 2, 1869 Michael Shashurk February 28, 1892 Phoenixville 3067 Sabders Verna Anna 28 R Fretz August 1, 1921 West Chester 23137 Sabo Anna Pauline 17 Frank Zolenski June 21, 1924 Coatesville 25105 Sabo AnnieNovember 9, 1879 John Fenyik November 17, 1900 Mont Clare 8025 Sabo EstherMay 1, 1885 Andrew Kis April 30, 1904 Phoenixville 10372 Sabo Maria Suka 48 Alex Bakonyo July 19, 1925 Coatesville 25875 Sabo Mary 35 John Louise August 15, 1918 Coatesville 20979 Sabo MarySeptember 1874 Alexander Berike September 27, 1896 Phoenixville 5522 Sabo RebaApril 15, 1882 Balind Szargo October 1, 1904 Phoenixville 10627 Sabol Mary Anna 21 Michael Gics October 13, 1928 Phoenixville 28657 Sabol Susie 20 Luke Platco January 8, 1925 25539 Sabolein MaryNovember 2, 1887 Michael Sesctko February 20, 1909 Phoenixville 14254 Saccuto AnnaJuly 16, 1884 Francesco Pizii August 3, 1911 15841 Sack Bertha 21 Max Wax May 15, 1929 West Chester 29268 Sacks IdaMarch 16, 1854 Charles Wilson December 11, 1900 Philadelphia 8082 Saddler AnneJune 1869 Simon Ringold April 25, 1892 Rosedale 3158 Saddler Gertrude May 25 David Hill April 22, 1926 West Chester 26364 Saddler Nellie Walton 26 Caleb Thompson October 13, 1915 West Chester 18754 Chester County Archives and Record Services, West Chester, PA 19380 Bride's Last Name Bride's First Name Bride's Middle Bride's Date of Birth Bride's Age Groom's First Groom's Last Date of Application Date of Marriage Place of Marriage License # Sadensky MaryJune 10, 1885 Joseph Cazuta November 7, 1908 Philadelphia 14104 Sadinska AnnaFebruary 22, 1885 Michael Bagan February 17, 1907 Philadelphia 12457 Sadler Elizabeth Dorothy 24 William Kauffman October 14, 1922 Nottingham 23966 Sadler Ida MayJanuary 13, 1877 John Byerly December 31, 1895 Parkesburg 5114 Sadler MaudeMay 17, 1879 J Townsley October 4, 1900 Parkesburg 7946 Sadler Sarah EMay 2, 1862 Walter Monteish February 17, 1887 East Brandywine 496 Sadler Tamsen1869 Thomas Kennedy January 29, 1896 Brandywine Manor 5176 Sadoska Krystyna 21 John Hozyash August 7, 1917 Mont Clare 20222 Safriemyos MargritFebruary 10, 1891 John Biro March 24, 1908 West Chester 13694 Sagebeer Fannie MJanuary 23, 1866 James Bartleson November 5, 1889 Coatesville 1773 Sagebur Bertha LDecember 28, 1858 Bery Yarnall June 22, 1891 2692 Sager Annie 44 Emanual Black October 12, 1922 West Chester 23961 Sager Elizabeth B 37 Robert Evans November 29, 1917 West Chester 20480 Sagere LeahJanuary 24, 1892 Isaac Beckett July 1, 1912 Westtown 16385 Sagers Bertha 21 Walter Butcher March 29, 1917 West Chester 19878 Sagers Mary H 27 John Eselbey November 22, 1913 West Chester 17432 Saggers MaggieDecember 25, 1884 William Boyer December 3, 1901 M. E. Church 8726 Sagner Blanch ENovember 2, 1889 Joseph Burton April 2, 1910 Coatesville 14964 Sagner Elsie RSeptember 10, 1891 George Bowman November 3, 1909 Coatesville 14716 Sagner Ida May 22 Wilmer Miller April 7, 1917 Beartown 19891 Sagner Mae 19 Stanley Jackson December 15, 1923 24833 Sagner Maggie MMay 4, 1894 James McKim April 20, 1912 Coatesville 16273 Sagner Rosie Ethel 18 Edward Townsend December 22, 1913 Coatesville 17488 Sagner SarahDecember 15, 1875 19 J Savage November 1, 1894 Downingtown 4448 Sagnor Clara V 17 Eugene Watkins May 13, 1916 Coatesville 19193 Chester County Archives and Record Services, West Chester, PA 19380 Bride's Last Name Bride's First Name Bride's Middle Bride's Date of Birth Bride's Age Groom's First Groom's Last Date of Application Date of Marriage Place of Marriage License # Sahler Lela NSeptember 29, 1883 T Walter April 21, 1906 West Chester 11782 Sahler Mary SNovember 29, 1885 Robert Rakestraw September 12, 1906 East Bradford 12067 Sahm Mary CMay 26, 1888 John Carroll April 27, 1909 Phoenixville 14376 Saile Esther E1876 Thomas Ford January 3, 1900 Kennett Square 7501 Sakacs AnnieMarch 2, 1881 Michael Pevarnik May 3, 1902 Phoenixville 9076 Sakay Mary 19 John Sabo April 29, 1919 West Chester 21375 Sakely Julia 17 Anthony Woerain November 15, 1919 Coatesville 21830 Sakso Margaret 21 Robert Moreland November 26, 1928 Coatesville 28848 Salada Mary Jane 22 Russell Linton February 1, 1930 West Chester 29892 Salaj AnnieMarch 10, 1881 Mike Jalcz May 17, 1902 Mont Clare, Montgomery Co. 9095 Salathe Rosalie LDecember 8, 1887 Harvey Orcutt September 18, 1912 Phoenixville 16542 Salay Julia 26 Stephen Wolfinger September 15, 1923 Phoenixville 24635 Salczynska Mary 18 Joseph Mikodenicznk June 28, 1914 Coatesville 17858 Sale Laura Elizabeth 21 Charles Lentz April 6, 1929 West Chester 29169 Salisbury Amy Elizabeth 22 Frederick Thompson September 20, 1919 U. A. M. E. Parsonage 21700 Salisbury Margaret A 41 Charles Bratton May 27, 1920 Coatesville 22244 Salisbury Mary Elizabeth 36 Benjamin Rustin August 26, 1920 Coatesville 22475 Saller Ida MayJanuary 26, 1876 Walter Lilley October 5, 1893 Thorndale 3926 Salmon Mildred Pierson 21 Earl Stafford December 8, 1921 Philadelphia 23397 Salnesberry Annie1873 21 John London January 31, 1895 West Chester 4622 Salogue Annie1864 Frank Zurick May 15, 1886 Phoenixville 248 Salters LucretiaFebruary 13, 1848 George Kelley June 30, 1901 Avondale 8461 Salvador Marian Alice 30 William Cook August 31, 1929 West Chester 29563 Salvatico Violet 21 John Henry February 28, 1929 West Chester 29058 Salvatore Margaret 21 Fiori Milorey October 24, 1928 West Chester 28763 Chester County Archives and Record Services, West Chester, PA 19380 Bride's Last Name Bride's First Name Bride's Middle Bride's Date of Birth Bride's Age Groom's First Groom's Last Date of Application Date of Marriage Place of Marriage License # Sames MattieSeptember 29, 1890 Daniel Hopkins October 3, 1911 West Chester 15946 Samko AnnaMay 8, 1890 Mihaly Tarcseuyik May 4, 1912 Mont Clare 16313 Sammartino Lucy 21 Gus DePasquale September 6, 1927 West Chester 27488 Sammons Lizzie WMay 18, 1854 Pierce Miller March 19, 1890 West Chester 1991 Samogyi Anna 18 Stephen Frisco May 9, 1921 Phoenixville 22956 Samples Anna Frances 24 John Wilson January 11, 1926 Oxford 26201 Sampson Gertrude 22 Harry Baliban November 3, 1928 Philadelphia 28350 Sampson KatieMay 15, 1863 John Britton December 22, 1898 6740 Sampson MarieMay 1882 Fredrick Gibson November 30, 1904 Coatesville 10759 Sampson Maud ESeptember 19, 1881 Amos Rogers February 8, 1906 West Chester 11658 Samu Roza 41 Vincze Takacs September 1, 1918 Phoenixville 21001 Sanders EdithAugust 17, 1873 William Glasspool April 12, 1909 Paoli 14355 Sanders Mabel H 20 Frederick Pryor August 26, 1919 Lincoln University 21640 Sanders Olie J 27 William Campbell July 20, 1914 West Chester 17895 Sando Ida MayJune 1870 Edward Hilton May 17, 1897 Ercildoun 5885 Sandoe FrancesApril 20 Michael Kuckartzyk February 8, 1910 Coatesville 14872 Sandoe Roxia 24 Andrew Usner January 20, 1917 West Chester 19730 Sandor Mary Emma 20 Davis McCarraher September 24, 1914 Coatesville 18010 Sandos Jennie1871 William Johnson December 2, 1897 West Chester 6168 Sands Helen 20 Robert Bauer July 14, 1923 Spring City 24510 Sands Martha 21 Howard Wesley July 3, 1929 Philadelphia 29436 Sandstrom Evelyn D 21 John Rausbeck May 17, 1929 West Chester 29276 Sanfilipo Fannie 21 Daniel Menna October 5, 1919 Coatesville 21300 Sanger Nellie Virginia 21 Linwood Strickland September 14, 1921 Kennett Square 23219 Sannullo Maria GiuseppaFebruary 20, 1898 Vitaliano Lauretano March 11, 1913 Phoenixville 16858 Chester County Archives and Record Services, West Chester, PA 19380 Bride's Last Name Bride's First Name Bride's Middle Bride's Date of Birth Bride's Age Groom's First Groom's Last Date of Application Date of Marriage Place of Marriage License # Sansenroth Gertrude MJuly 18, 1886 Lawrence Cummings April 24, 1912 St. Joseph's church 16312 Sansone Rose Marie 21 Salvatore Filippo January 12, 1929 West Chester 28958 Santamassino VictoriaApril 21, 1878 Paul Venor June 18, 1899 West Grove 6981 Sapanoro Virginia 19 Dominic Falini December 15, 1919 West Chester 21901 Sarafian Evkin 25 Menis Bouloution June 5, 1921 Coatesville 23019 Sargent Ethel M 39 William McCollum October 11, 1922 Berwyn 23938 Sargent Stella Mary 22 Harry Hewson November 24, 1920 West Chester 22695 Sarimenti Lucia 18 Giueseppe diAndrea October 15, 1914 Philadelphia 18017 Sarkees Catherine V 22 William Myers December 16, 1920 Phoenixville 22733 Sarkes Minnie 21 Orville Mann July 3, 1929 Philadelphia 29431 Sarmento Francesco 21 Giovionni Maduro December 27, 1917 20552 Sarobin Techla 26 Michael Pic March 20, 1914 Mont Clare 17661 Saron AnnieMarch 15, 1879 Peter Pinjgar June 15, 1901 Phoenixville 8418 Sartor HattieFebruary 18, 1890 Joseph Smith February 3, 1908 West Chester 13604 Sasinowski Clara Victoria 21 Peter Marcinkowski April 30, 1927 West Chester 27156 Sassaman AldaOctober 20, 1881 Clyde Mosteller February 27, 1908 West Chester 13646 Sassaman Frances EOctober 20, 1879 George Day March 1, 1905 West Chester 10935 Sassaman Frances S 35 David Menkins April 19, 1917 Philadelphia 19866 Sassaman MaryMay 17, 1886 A Carl March 21, 1908 Parkerford 13689 Satschar AnnieAugust 21, 1869 18 H Bush January
Recommended publications
  • Piracy, Illicit Trade, and the Construction of Commercial
    Navigating the Atlantic World: Piracy, Illicit Trade, and the Construction of Commercial Networks, 1650-1791 Dissertation Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University by Jamie LeAnne Goodall, M.A. Graduate Program in History The Ohio State University 2016 Dissertation Committee: Margaret Newell, Advisor John Brooke David Staley Copyright by Jamie LeAnne Goodall 2016 Abstract This dissertation seeks to move pirates and their economic relationships from the social and legal margins of the Atlantic world to the center of it and integrate them into the broader history of early modern colonization and commerce. In doing so, I examine piracy and illicit activities such as smuggling and shipwrecking through a new lens. They act as a form of economic engagement that could not only be used by empires and colonies as tools of competitive international trade, but also as activities that served to fuel the developing Caribbean-Atlantic economy, in many ways allowing the plantation economy of several Caribbean-Atlantic islands to flourish. Ultimately, in places like Jamaica and Barbados, the success of the plantation economy would eventually displace the opportunistic market of piracy and related activities. Plantations rarely eradicated these economies of opportunity, though, as these islands still served as important commercial hubs: ports loaded, unloaded, and repaired ships, taverns attracted a variety of visitors, and shipwrecking became a regulated form of employment. In places like Tortuga and the Bahamas where agricultural production was not as successful, illicit activities managed to maintain a foothold much longer.
    [Show full text]
  • Ye Intruders Beware: Fantastical Pirates in the Golden Age of Illustration
    YE INTRUDERS BEWARE: FANTASTICAL PIRATES IN THE GOLDEN AGE OF ILLUSTRATION Anne M. Loechle Submitted to the faculty of the University Graduate School in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of the History of Art Indiana University November 2010 Accepted by the Graduate Faculty, Indiana University, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Doctoral Committee _________________________________ Chairperson, Sarah Burns, Ph.D. __________________________________ Janet Kennedy, Ph.D. __________________________________ Patrick McNaughton, Ph.D. __________________________________ Beverly Stoeltje, Ph.D. November 9, 2010 ii ©2010 Anne M. Loechle ALL RIGHTS RESERVED iii Acknowledgments I am indebted to many people for the help and encouragement they have given me during the long duration of this project. From academic and financial to editorial and emotional, I was never lacking in support. I am truly thankful, not to mention lucky. Sarah Burns, my advisor and mentor, supported my ideas, cheered my successes, and patiently edited and helped me to revise my failures. I also owe her thanks for encouraging me to pursue an unorthodox topic. From the moment pirates came up during one of our meetings in the spring of 2005, I was hooked. She knew it, and she continuously suggested ways to expand the idea first into an independent study, and then into this dissertation. My dissertation committee – Janet Kennedy, Patrick McNaughton, and Beverly Stoeltje – likewise deserves my thanks for their mentoring and enthusiasm. Other scholars have graciously shared with me their knowledge and input along the way. David M. Lubin read a version of my third chapter and gave me helpful advice, opening up to me new ways of thinking about Howard Pyle in particular.
    [Show full text]
  • Supplement to November 14, 2016
    BARBADOS SUPPLEMENT TO NOVEMBER 14, 2016 Brbados supplement 2016.indd 1 11/9/2016 2:32:31 PM 2 BARBADOS Brbados supplement 2016.indd 2 11/9/2016 2:32:34 PM Mayers BARBADOS celebrates 50 years of independence IAN STALKER arbados is now enjoying both half a century of independence Peter Mayers, Barbados Tourism Marketing’s director, Canada, and a thriving tourism industry, as it undertakes jubilee says that there have been some “challenges” in the Canadian Bcelebrations marking the 50-years milestone. market, such as our struggling dollar. Five decades after becoming independent, the country has “But in the grand scheme of things, we’ve held our own,” he become a Caribbean tourism industry powerhouse, with last year reports. being a record tourism year for the sun-soaked island. Long- One plus has been Air Canada’s decision to boost service to stay arrivals rose 13.7%, hitting 591,892, the country’s best-ever the island, with the carrier bringing people from both Toronto and performance. Canada played a major role in that milestone, Montreal to Barbados this winter. contributing 12.6% of all long-stay arrivals. Canadian visitations The country is also seeing major developments in its hotel room were up 13%. inventory, in part because of the arrival of Sandals Barbados, and BARBADOS 3 Brbados supplement 2016.indd 3 11/9/2016 2:32:36 PM Sugar Bay, another all-inclusive in a destination that traditionally hasn’t gone the all-inclusive route to the same degree that many other Caribbean destinations have. All-inclusive lodging options will further grow when a Beaches begins welcoming guests down the road.
    [Show full text]
  • The Many Faces of Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe: Examining the Crusoe Myth in Film and on Television
    THE MANY FACES OF DANIEL DEFOE'S ROBINSON CRUSOE: EXAMINING THE CRUSOE MYTH IN FILM AND ON TELEVISION A Dissertation presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School at the University of Missouri-Columbia In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy by SOPHIA NIKOLEISHVILI Dr. Haskell Hinnant, Dissertation Supervisor DECEMBER 2007 The undersigned, appointed by the dean of the Graduate School, have examined the dissertation entitled THE MANY FACES OF DANIEL DEFOE’S ROBINSON CRUSOE: EXAMINING THE CRUSOE MYTH IN FILM AND ON TELEVISION presented by Sophia Nikoleishvili, a candidate for the degree of doctor of philosophy, and hereby certify that, in their opinion, it is worthy of acceptance. Professor Haskell Hinnant Professor George Justice Professor Devoney Looser Professor Catherine Parke Professor Patricia Crown ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This dissertation would not have been possible without the help of my adviser, Dr. Haskell Hinnant, to whom I would like to express the deepest gratitude. His continual guidance and persistent help have been greatly appreciated. I would also like to thank the members of my committee, Dr. Catherine Parke, Dr. George Justice, Dr. Devoney Looser, and Dr. Patricia Crown for their direction, support, and patience, and for their confidence in me. Their recommendations and suggestions have been invaluable. ii TABLE OF CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS...................................................................................................ii INTRODUCTION...................................................................................................................1
    [Show full text]
  • The Gibbet in the Landscape: Locating the Criminal Corpse in Mid-Eighteenth-Century England Zoe Dyndor
    OPEN 3 The Gibbet in the Landscape: Locating the Criminal Corpse in Mid-Eighteenth-Century England Zoe Dyndor In the late 1740s a group of smugglers known as the Hawkhurst gang committed a number of violent crimes that included several brutal murders. At least 75 of the gang were subsequently hung or transported for smuggling, robbery and murder. Of those in receipt of the death sentence, 14 were subjected to the further punishment of hanging in chains (or gibbeting), thereby inflicting further ignominy on the offenders.1 Hanging in chains was usually reserved for murderers, and occasionally mail robbers. However, between 1747 and 1750 members of the Hawkhurst gang were also gibbeted for crimes including smug- gling and robbery. Gibbeting was an infrequently used punishment, but the violent circumstances of the Hawkhurst gang’s crimes coupled with the authorities’ desire to punish smugglers on the south coast led to the large number of gibbetings, and consequently a peak in the use of the punishment in the 1740s. These gibbetings reflected the increasingly severe measures taken to eradicate the crime of smuggling. They were temporally and spatially specific, reflecting the nature of the crimes and the circumstances that led to the hanging in chains. This study provides an insight into the extreme use of a particular punishment, showing that judicial penalties were adapted to fit the circumstances of the crimes and reflect how the offences were perceived. Hanging a body in chains was a post-execution punishment used to subject further humiliation and ignominy on criminals who were to be made an example of, or were deemed to have committed especially heinous crimes.
    [Show full text]
  • Charles Darwin and the Origin of Species Recent Titles in Greenwood Guides to Historic Events, 1500–1900
    Charles Darwin and The Origin of Species Recent Titles in Greenwood Guides to Historic Events, 1500–1900 The American Revolution Joseph C. Morton The French Revolution Linda S. Frey and Marsha L. Frey The French and Indian War Alfred A. Cave The Lewis and Clark Expedition Harry William Fritz The Second Great Awakening and the Transcendentalists Barry Hankins The Age of Napoleon Susan P. Conner The American Civil War Cole C. Kingseed The Scientific Revolution and the Foundations of Modern Science Wilbur Applebaum The Mexican War David S. Heidler and Jeanne T. Heidler The Abolitionist Movement Claudine L. Ferrell Maritime Exploration in the Age of Discovery, 1415–1800 Ronald S. Love The Trail of Tears and Indian Removal Amy H. Sturgis Charles Darwin and The Origin of Species KEITH A. FRANCIS Greenwood Guides to Historic Events, 1500–1900 Linda S. Frey and Marsha L. Frey, Series Editors GREENWOOD PRESS Westport, Connecticut London Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Francis, Keith A. Charles Darwin and The origin of species / Keith A. Francis. p. cm. — (Greenwood guides to historic events, 1500–1900, ISSN 1538-442X) Includes bibliographical references. ISBN 0-313-31748-8 (alk. paper) 1. Darwin, Charles, 1809–1882. On the origin of species. 2. Darwin, Charles, 1809–1882. 3. Evolution (Biology). I. Title. QH365.O8F73 2007 576.802092—dc22 2006029478 British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data is available. Copyright ' 2007 by Keith A. Francis All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, by any process or technique, without the express written consent of the publisher. Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 2006029478 ISBN-10: 0-313-31748-8 ISBN-13: 978-0-313-31748-4 ISSN: 1538-442X First published in 2007 Greenwood Press, 88 Post Road West, Westport, CT 06881 An imprint of Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc.
    [Show full text]
  • Pirate Articles and Their Society, 1660-1730
    ‘Piratical Schemes and Contracts’: Pirate Articles and their Society, 1660-1730 Submitted by Edward Theophilus Fox to the University of Exeter as a thesis for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Maritime History In May 2013 This thesis is available for Library use on the understanding that it is copyright material and that no quotation from the thesis may be published without proper acknowledgement. I certify that all material in this thesis which is not my own work has been identified and that no material has previously been submitted and approved for the award of a degree by this or any other University. Signature: ………………………………………………………….. 1 Abstract During the so-called ‘golden age’ of piracy that occurred in the Atlantic and Indian Oceans in the later seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, several thousands of men and a handful of women sailed aboard pirate ships. The narrative, operational techniques, and economic repercussions of the waves of piracy that threatened maritime trade during the ‘golden age’ have fascinated researchers, and so too has the social history of the people involved. Traditionally, the historiography of the social history of pirates has portrayed them as democratic and highly egalitarian bandits, divided their spoil fairly amongst their number, offered compensation for comrades injured in battle, and appointed their own officers by popular vote. They have been presented in contrast to the legitimate societies of Europe and America, and as revolutionaries, eschewing the unfair and harsh practices prevalent in legitimate maritime employment. This study, however, argues that the ‘revolutionary’ model of ‘golden age’ pirates is not an accurate reflection of reality.
    [Show full text]
  • Estta816047 04/21/2017 in the United States Patent And
    Trademark Trial and Appeal Board Electronic Filing System. http://estta.uspto.gov ESTTA Tracking number: ESTTA816047 Filing date: 04/21/2017 IN THE UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE TRADEMARK TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Proceeding 91226939 Party Defendant Conyngham Brewing Company Correspondence LEE ANN PALUBINSKY Address CONYNGHAM BREWING COMPANY PO BOX 1208 CONYNGHAM, PA 18219-0910 UNITED STATES [email protected] Submission Defendant's Notice of Reliance Filer's Name Lee Ann Palubinsky Filer's e-mail [email protected] Signature /Lee Ann Palubinsky/ Date 04/21/2017 Attachments Applicant Notice of Reliance and Exhibits_Part1.pdf(3434975 bytes ) Applicant Notice of Reliance and Exhibits_Part2.pdf(4240583 bytes ) Applicant Notice of Reliance and Exhibits_Part3.pdf(4212347 bytes ) Applicant Notice of Reliance and Exhibits_Part4.pdf(5424027 bytes ) IN THE UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE TRADEMARK TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD PATRON SPIRITS INTERNATIONAL AG, Opposition No. 91226939 Opposer, Serial No. 86765751 v. Mark: PIRATE PISS CONYNGHAM BREWING COMPANY, Published for Opposition: Applicant February 16, 2016 __________________________________________/ Commissioner for Trademarks PO Box 1451 Alexandria, Virginia 22313-1451 APPLICANT’S NOTICE OF RELIANCE Pursuant to Trademark Rule 2.122(e), 37 C.F.R. §2.122(e), and Trademark Trial and Appeal Board Manual of Procedure Sections 703.02(b) and 708, Applicant Conyngham Brewing Company (“Applicant”) hereby offers into evidence and gives notice that it will rely on the following documents in this proceeding: I. FEDERAL REGISTRATIONS 1. U.S. Application Serial Number 86765751 for PIRATE PISS. A true and correct copy of a printout from the Trademark Electronic Search System (“TESS”) database showing the current status and title of Application Serial Number 86765751 as of 4/20/2017 is attached hereto as Exhibit 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Civil War Manuscripts
    CIVIL WAR MANUSCRIPTS CIVIL WAR MANUSCRIPTS MANUSCRIPT READING ROW '•'" -"•••-' -'- J+l. MANUSCRIPT READING ROOM CIVIL WAR MANUSCRIPTS A Guide to Collections in the Manuscript Division of the Library of Congress Compiled by John R. Sellers LIBRARY OF CONGRESS WASHINGTON 1986 Cover: Ulysses S. Grant Title page: Benjamin F. Butler, Montgomery C. Meigs, Joseph Hooker, and David D. Porter Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Library of Congress. Manuscript Division. Civil War manuscripts. Includes index. Supt. of Docs, no.: LC 42:C49 1. United States—History—Civil War, 1861-1865— Manuscripts—Catalogs. 2. United States—History— Civil War, 1861-1865—Sources—Bibliography—Catalogs. 3. Library of Congress. Manuscript Division—Catalogs. I. Sellers, John R. II. Title. Z1242.L48 1986 [E468] 016.9737 81-607105 ISBN 0-8444-0381-4 The portraits in this guide were reproduced from a photograph album in the James Wadsworth family papers, Manuscript Division, Library of Congress. The album contains nearly 200 original photographs (numbered sequentially at the top), most of which were autographed by their subjects. The photo- graphs were collected by John Hay, an author and statesman who was Lin- coln's private secretary from 1860 to 1865. For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 20402. PREFACE To Abraham Lincoln, the Civil War was essentially a people's contest over the maintenance of a government dedi- cated to the elevation of man and the right of every citizen to an unfettered start in the race of life. President Lincoln believed that most Americans understood this, for he liked to boast that while large numbers of Army and Navy officers had resigned their commissions to take up arms against the government, not one common soldier or sailor was known to have deserted his post to fight for the Confederacy.
    [Show full text]
  • The Personality Changes on Major Character in Defoe's
    THE PERSONALITY CHANGES ON MAJOR CHARACTER IN DEFOE’S ROBINSON CRUSOE A THESIS BY CINIO STEVEN SINAGA REG. NO. 120705096 DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH FACULTY OF CULTURAL STUDIES UNIVERSITY OF SUMATERA UTARA MEDAN 2016 1 UNIVERSITAS SUMATERA UTARA THE PERSONALITY CHANGES ON MAJOR CHARACTER IN DEFOE’S ROBINSON CRUSOE A THESIS BY CINIO STEVEN SINAGA REG. NUMBER: 120705096 SUPERVISOR CO-SUPERVISOR Drs. Parlindungan Purba. M.Hum. Drs. Siamir Marulafau. M.Hum. NIP.196302161989031003 NIP. 195805171985031003 Submitted to Faculty of Cultural Studies University of Sumatera Utara Medan in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Sarjana Sastra From Department English. DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH FACULTY OF CULTURAL STUDIES UNIVERSITY OF SUMATERA UTARA MEDAN 2016 2 UNIVERSITAS SUMATERA UTARA Approved by the Department of English, Faculty of Cultural Studies University of Sumatera Utara (USU) Medan as thesis for The Sarjana Sastra Examination. Head, Secretary, Dr. H. Muhizar Muchtar, M.S. Rahmadsyah Rangkuti, M.A., Ph.D NIP. 19541117198003 1 002 NIP. 19750209 200812 1 002 3 UNIVERSITAS SUMATERA UTARA Accepted by the Board of Examiners in partial fulfillment of requirements for the degree of Sarjana Sastra from the Department of English, Faculty of Cultural Studies University of Sumatera Utara, Medan. The examination is held in Department of English Faculty of Cultural Studies University of Sumatera Utara on 24 October 2016 Dean of Faculty of Cultural Studies University of Sumatera Utara Dr. Budi Agustono, M.S. NIP. 19600805 198703 1 001 Board of Examiners Dr. H. Muhizar Muchtar, M.S. ___________________ Rahmadsyah Rangkuti, M.A., Ph.D. ___________________ Dr. Siti Norma Nasution, M.Hum.
    [Show full text]
  • The Ordeal of Mr. Pepys's Clerk
    The Ordeal of Mr. Pepys's Clerk John Harold Wilson The Oi4eal o£Mr. PepyssCIeA Ohio State University Press Copyright * 1972 by the Ohio State University Press All Rights Reserved Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 74-180897 International Standard Book Number 0-8142-0166-0 Manufactured in the United States of America To Richard D. Altick and Albert J. Kuhn, maximas gratias Contents Preface ix Chapter One Enter the Villain 3 Two Interlude for Plots 17 Three Winchester House 31 Four Captain Bedloe 45 Five Sam Atkins's Dilemma 63 Six The Terror 79 Seven The Trial 95 Eight Tribulation to Triumph 111 Appendixes 127 Index 147 Preface The strange story of Samuel Atkins, Mr. Pepys's clerk (Mr. Pepys would have said "dark") is true. Even the dialogue is taken verbatim from Atkins's own recollections of his experience and from the stenographic records of his trial. I am responsible for the ordering of events, for the neces­ sary background material, and for descriptions of moods and emotions. In the last I have been guided by a strict concern for Sam Atkins's character as he revealed it in a few personal letters and in his manuscript reports: "An Account of the Passages at my Several Examinations before the Committees of Lords and Commons" and "A Short Narrative of Samuel Atkins, his Case." The author wishes to express his gratitude to the Bodleian Library, Oxford University, for permission to reproduce manuscript materials from its Department of Western Manu­ scripts. J. H. W. September, 1971 Enter the Villain 1 On July 23, 1676, His Majesty's Ketch Quaker lay hove- to in the sun-drenched Mediterranean off the southern coast of Spain, east of Velez Malaga.
    [Show full text]
  • Farmington, the Village of Beautiful Homes" 1906
    Farmington,Connecticut,thevillageofbeautifulhomes.Photographicreproductions,illustratingeveryhomeintown.Prominentpeoplepastandpresent,allschoolchildren,localantiques,etc ArthurL.Brandegee,EddyN.Smith .- > 7 V .' r .' ' ' -. .' / • 1 « , < . I : '7 ; .. - j , - - ^ . LIBRARYF O THE ■ - ' 1 ~ . 1 - Q l- — n# ■ L UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA . .> -. : < ..'. 3 y t '. ;( 1> ' i '. GIFTF O '..jr. '' . ' . r s ; » r , * ' *' 1 . ,"'»* 1 - . -'.'•>•■. **,,'''' - * Li: ''.'<.. f ^ v '\ ' & > j Jffarmltujtmt H gfy. HF.NHE T LORD MADE THE WORLD HE MADE ASIA, AFRICA, AND EUROPE, AND LAST OF ALL HE MADE NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA. HE MADE THE AMERICAS WITH SPECIAL CARE, AS THAT IS THE PLACE WHERE THE NATIONS OF THE WORLD WOULD FINALLY COME TOGETHER. WHEN THE LORD WAS MAKING NEW ENGLAND, ONE OF THE LITTLE ANGELS ASKF.D THAT HE TOO MIGHT MAKE A STATU. SO THE LORD LET HIM MAKE THE STATE OF CONNEC TICUT. AS THE LITTLE ANGELS SHAPED THE RIVERS AND BUILT UP THE MOUNTAINS, I11s CHEEKS WERE RED WITH EXCITEMENT. HU T W HEN THE WORK WAS NEARLY FINISHED THERE WAS A LARGE HOLLOW AND THE MATERIAL WAS ALL GONE. THEN THE LITTLE ANGEL WAS OVERWHELMED WITH CONFUSION. HUT THE LORD TOOK HIM KINDLY BY THE HAND, AND THE LORD TOOK FROM THE FOLDS OF HIS MANTLE SOME OF THE STUFF OF WHICH PARADISE IS MADE AND HE FITTED IT INTO THE HOLE AND THE PLAC E W \S FARMINGTON. R.I. I 11. mm &0 'I i < 3^ vV C /5 fa O <4 H Z s w a is**1? < fefet f : h J< 8 1 J < 3 T 2 fa ?1 c 5$ w f'fc4 t * > .4 F O < f a THE I AMES LEWIS COWLES PLACE PHOTOGRAPHIC R EPRODUCTIONS, ILLUSTRATING i EVERY HOMEN I THE TOWN.
    [Show full text]