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 #   Notater   Knyttet til 
40301 Nævnt som landsdommer i Fyn 1450 og 1489. Reventlow, Knud Joachimsen af Fyn, til Søbo (I4318)
 
40302 Nævnt som marsk endnu i 1395. Puke, Hr. Erik Kettilsson (I3997)
 
40303 Nævnt som Mrs Thora Locander i nekrolog 1955 for broderen Jens, gengivet i Find a Grave. Laursen, Thora J. (I12679)
 
40304 Nævnt som møller i 1780 ved Annas død
FT 1803: Frantz Petersen Beeck, 43, Husfader Erbpächter Zur Tauschauer Mühle hat zugleich ein wenige Land. Med ægtefælle Anna Christina Nissenstochter (46), børnene Peter Beeck (21, Ugift), Boye Beeck (18, Ugift), Jacob Beeck (10), Ludewig Beeck (5) Anneken Beeck (23, Ugift), Anna Beeck (12), og to møllersvende.
1808 ved Anneckens bryllup: Møller i Tauskau Mølle. 
Beeck, Frantz Petersen (I2418)
 
40305 Nævnt som ridder 1381, men som væbner 1397, måske ridder samme eller følgende år? Sudreims-Ätten, Hr. Jon Marteinsson til Sudreim (I16972)
 
40306 Nævnt som ridder 16 Jul 1408, væbner 12 Aug 1403. Bonde, Hr. Knut Tordsson (I2926)
 
40307 Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. Nulevende (I6832)
 
40308 Nævnt som værende gift 9 Ap 1263.
Yderligere børn i ægteskabet: Folke Karlsson (Lejonbalk) (1262 - btw 1285-1286),
Magnus Karlsson (Lejonbalk) (1262 - aft 1316). 
Familie: Hr. Karl Ingeborgason Lejonbalk / Ulfhild Sigtryggsdotter Boberg (F1017)
 
40309 Nævnt tidligst 1254. Krage, Hr. Eskild (I4667)
 
40310 Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. Nulevende (I17858)
 
40311 Nævnt under "døde siden sidst". Kjeldsen, Søren Skovsgaard (I17097)
 
40312 Nævnt ved datteren Sophias begravelse som Anna Bertelsens.
Tvivlsomt, om Nis Jacobsen Lunding og Anna Bertelsen er morforældre til Nikolai Iversen, men de er morforældre til Conrad Iversen. 
Bertelsdatter, Anna (I2515)
 
40313 Nævt ifm. skifte 1799 efter nevø (se note). Jepsen, Jens (I15956)
 
40314 Nød fattigunderstøttelse og ejede intet.  Pedersen, Hans (I112)
 
40315 Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. Nulevende (I11852)
 
40316 Nørre Halland, Sverige Laxmand, Mads Steensen til Rønneholm (I5255)
 
40317 Nørre Søby kirkegård Skaarup, Jakob Sigvald (I1606)
 
40318 Nørrejylland. Munk, Mogens (I3254)
 
40319 O GL D 10
Birgit Katharin Marcussen
30-04-1934, 07-11-2021 
Marcussen, Birgit Katharin (I22005)
 
40320 O. 1483. Peder Friis. »Hic iacet nobil(is) vir Petrus Friis, qui o(biit) an(n)o D(omi)ni mcccclxxxiii sab(a)to s(an)c(t)o p(e)n(teco)ste una cu(m) nobili contorali sua d(omi)na Cristina, filia Nico[la]i, q(ue) o(biit) anno eod(em)« (»Her ligger ædelig Mand Peder Friis, som døde i Herrens Aar 1483 paa den hellige Pinselørdag (17. Maj), tilligemed sin ædle Ægtefælle, Fru Cristine Nielsdatter, som døde samme Aar«). Hvidgraa, gotlandsk Kalksten, 243 ×166 cm; Randskrift med Minuskler, i Hjørnerne Cirkler med livfulde Evangelisttegn, der holder Skriftbaand. Forneden i Midtfeltet ses Friis’s og Banners hjelmede Vaaben, hvis Hjelmløv breder sig over næsten hele Feltet. Den smukt udførte Sten er udgaaet fra »Aarhus-Bispemesters« Værksted, hvorfra bl. a. ogsaa Jens Iversen Langes Sten i Aarhus Domkirke stammer64. Laa i Slutningen af 1700’erne i nordre Korsarm »op imod Koret og Alteret« (Abildgaard), »ved den anden Rad af Kvindestolene« (Thura), »hvor før var Kong Olufs Alter«65, men er nu opsat paa nordre Sideskibs Østvæg. (Danmarks Kirker) Banner, Kirstine Nielsdatter (I4267)
 
40321 O. 1500. Jens Skave med Hustru og Søn, sidstnævnte død 1452 (Fig. 59). Stenen har, afvigende fra Tidens gængse Form, Indskriften anbragt paa Midtpartiet foroven med Reliefmajuskler i Tværskrift: »Hic iace(n)t d(omi)n(u)s Joha(n)nes Skawe miles cum uxore sua d(omi)na C(ri)stina et filio suo d(omi)no Nicolao Skawe milite q(vi) Nic(olaus) o(biit) MCDLII« (»Her hviler Hr. Johannes Skave, Ridder, og hans Hustru, Fru Kirstine og hans Søn Hr. Niels Skave, Ridder, hvilken Niels døde 1452«). Forneden ses Skave- Vaabnet, flankeret af to Skjolde med Hustruens fædrene og mødrene Vaaben: Snekken og Bjørn; i de øvre Hjørner Dobbeltrosetter. Vistnok Roskildearbejde. Gullandsk, 245 x 142 cm. Rejst i Søndre Korsarm. (Løffler S. 11, Tavle III). Skave, Hr. Jens til Eskildstrup (I3025)
 
40322 O. 1500. Jens Skave med Hustru og Søn, sidstnævnte død 1452 (Fig. 59). Stenen har, afvigende fra Tidens gængse Form, Indskriften anbragt paa Midtpartiet foroven med Reliefmajuskler i Tværskrift: »Hic iace(n)t d(omi)n(u)s Joha(n)nes Skawe miles cum uxore sua d(omi)na C(ri)stina et filio suo d(omi)no Nicolao Skawe milite q(vi) Nic(olaus) o(biit) MCDLII« (»Her hviler Hr. Johannes Skave, Ridder, og hans Hustru, Fru Kirstine og hans Søn Hr. Niels Skave, Ridder, hvilken Niels døde 1452«). Forneden ses Skave- Vaabnet, flankeret af to Skjolde med Hustruens fædrene og mødrene Vaaben: Snekken og Bjørn; i de øvre Hjørner Dobbeltrosetter. Vistnok Roskildearbejde. Gullandsk, 245 x 142 cm. Rejst i Søndre Korsarm. (Løffler S. 11, Tavle III). Skave, Hr. Niels Jensen til Eskildstrup (I3022)
 
40323 Oberst 1982, 1982 - 1985 chef for 1. Jyske Brigade i Fredericia, 1985 - 1988 chef for Hærens Officersskole. Generalmajor og blev chef for Jyske Division 1988.  Haslund-Christensen, Søren S.K.i diam., D.Ht. (I8975)
 
40324 Oberstinde Geddes Urne, Magdalene Sibylle Jørgensdatter (I6724)
 
40325 Obituary
Thomas Martin Osborn, 82, of Cobham Park Road, Warren, Pennsylvania, passed away at St. Vincent Hospital in Erie on June 18, 2023, after a brief illness. Born July 16, 1940, in Cleveland, Ohio, he was the son of the late Walton and Margaret (McKinley) Osborn. On October 19, 1968, Tom married LaDonna Ritchey, who preceded him in death on September 1, 2011.

Tom was a graduate of Curwensville High School. He obtained an associate degree in mechanical technology from Jamestown Community College with high honors. He honorably served his country in the United States Navy from 1959 to 1967 where he worked as a Nuclear Reactor Plant Operator and Electronics Technician. He attended the U.S. Naval Nuclear Power School and the U.S. Naval Electronics Technical School.

Tom enjoyed a successful career of over 40 years concluding with executive and consulting roles, primarily in the nuclear power plant industry. He held multiple licenses and served utility companies throughout the lower 48 states as a plant supervisor, engineer, project manager, and training instructor. Notable employers and clients include the Pennsylvania Electric Company, General Physics Corporation, GE Nuclear Energy, Reliant Energy, G.D. Barri and Associates, Inc., Pine Mountain Technologies, LLC, D.C. Cook Nuclear Plant, and NEC Corp.

He was a member of the First Presbyterian Church in Warren, a life member of The American Legion in Lock Haven, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Pine Grove Sportsman's Association, National Rifle Association. American Nuclear Society, American Society for Quality Control, and a former Volunteer Fire Chief of Black Forest Fire Company, Station #36. He enjoyed traveling with his wife, LaDonna, and hunting and fishing with his stepson Tommy.

Tom is survived by a stepson, Thomas A. Moore (Terri) of Sheffield; two stepdaughters, Denise E. (Raymond) Williams of Hendersonville, TN, and Karen S. Rogers of Savannah, GA; a brother, James Osborn of Concord, MA; and a sister Elizabeth "Betty" Dishong of Antrim, NH; eight grandchildren and twenty one great-grandchildren; and his English Bulldog "Miss Molly." In addition to his parents and wife, he was preceded in death by a son, William M. Osborn; a stepdaughter Patricia M. Moore; and two brothers, John W. Osborn and Mark A. Osborn. 
Sello, Thomas Henry (I729)
 
40326 OBITUARY New Lisbon, Wisconsin "Times" June 16, 1923:
"EMPLOYEE DEAD ANOTHER CHAPTER OF FAITHFUL SERVICE CLOSED WITH PASSING OF GARDNER B. KEENEY
Gardner B. Keeney, veteran railway employee on the Wisconsin Valley Division of the C.M. & St.P. Railroad, passed away Tuesday morning at his home in this city. Death was caused from ulcers of the stomach, followed by other complications. Though his illness covered a period of five years, Mr. Keeney was a patient sufferer and bore his illness bravely.
Mr. Keeney was born at Gold Hill, Pennsylvania, July 25, 1854. When but a small child he moved with his parents to Edgerton, Wisconsin, where he spent his boyhood days. Later he came to Tomah, where he began his career as a railroad employee on the Wisconsin Valley Division. Here he was united in marriage to Julia O. Riley and when the main passenger division point of the "Valley" was transferred to New Lisbon, they changed their residence to this city. Unto this union seven children were born, all of whom survive, viz: Harry of Portland Oregon; William of Portage; Arthur, Edna and Mrs. Mary Arntz of Milwaukee; Mrs. Mabel Schulstad of Minneapolis, Minnesota; and Mrs. Fannie Sommers of Detroit, Michigan. The mother passed away about thirty-three years ago. A few years afterward, on July 7, 1895, Miss Jennie Mouritsen was united in marriage to Mr. Keeney and to this union six children were born, five of whom with the mother survive him, viz: Gardner Jr. of Wausau; Asahel of Milwaukee; and Lucretia, Genevieve and Caroline of this city.
Mr. Keeney was an ever faithful employe of the C.M. & St.P. Ry for forty-four years, having been engaged as both freight and passenger brakeman. Up to the time of his illness and for many years previous he was employed in the latter capacity. Brakeman Keeney was always very courteous to the travelling public and through his long years of service became widely known and respected by all who came in contact with him. He was a good husband and father and true friend.
Funeral services will be held from the home today (Thursday) at 2:00 o'clock. Rev. M.R.Philpott of the First M. E. Church will officiate. Burial will be in the New Lisbon Cemetery. All of the children with the excepton of Harry of Portland Oregon, will be present at the obsequies."

Son of Schuyler Fassett Keeney 
Keeney, Gardner Benjamin (I7644)
 
40327 Obituary: Theodore Siegumfeldt Jacobsen, 1901-2003
Kraft, Robert Paul; Wallerstein, George
Abstract: Theodor Jacobsen, oldest member of the American Astronomical Society, died in Seattle on 17 July 2003 at the age of 102. His astronomical career, which began in the 1920's, coincided with the rise of astronomy in the University of Washington from a one-man activity within mathematics to today's major astronomical department of more than 30 faculty and other research personnel.

Born on 6 February 1901 in Copenhagen, Denmark, he immigrated with his parents, brother and three sisters to the USA in 1917. Even while he was still in Denmark, his interest in astronomy was sparked at age 7 by a gift from his parents of a two-inch telescope. As early as 1921, in the midst of his undergraduate studies in chemistry at Stanford, he wrote to Director W. W. Campbell of Lick Observatory, inquiring how he should prepare for a career in astronomy and whether one could make a living at it. Campbell encouraged him to learn as much physics and mathematics as possible with the outcome that, on completion of his BA degree at Stanford, Jacobsen became a University of California Berkeley graduate student and was appointed a Lick Observatory fellow in the period 1923 to 1926. Following completion of his PhD thesis, entitled ``A Redetermination of the Radial Velocity Curves of Certain Cepheid Variable Stars" (LOB, 379, 1926), he was appointed as ``assistant" at Lick, a position roughly equivalent to that of ``instructor" in a modern University environment.
Inquiries concerning whether Lick could recommend ``a promising young man to take over teaching some astronomy and math" from then President Spencer of the University of Washington were received by Lick's acting director Robert Aitken in 1928. They were looking for a Berkeley PhD, said Spencer, and Aitken responded with an enthusiastic recommendation of Theodor Jacobsen, who then took up his duties in Seattle with the beginning of the fall term 1928. Jacobsen succeeded H. Zanstra (of Zanstra mechanism fame) in the Dept. of Mathematics, but it was not until 1948 that astronomy was split off from mathematics, at which time Jacobsen became chair and sole member of the new Astronomy Department. During the World War II years, he taught navigation to the recruits who moved on to become naval officers. In the postwar years, he taught elementary astronomy, as well as more advanced courses in practical astronomy, the kinds of subjects found in Smart's "Spherical Astronomy" text including celestial mechanics and observational work using the UW Observatory transit instrument. He chaired the Astronomy Department until 1965 when the Department began to undergo its modern expansion; he formally retired in 1971.
Jacobsen's post-thesis research continued to center on the determination of radial velocities of cepheids as well as binary stars and he maintained connections on a modest scale with the Dominion Astrophysical Observatory in Victoria, B.C. In this era of emphasis on galaxy evolution and cosmology, it is easy to forget that in the 1920s, there was still controversy over the nature of cepheids---were they pulsating stars or merely some form of odd binary? Jacobsen's extremely accurate radial velocity curves of these stars, when combined with then newly emerging accurate light curves, did much to bolster the pulsation hypothesis. According to astronomers currently working in the field, Jacobsen's 1926 velocity curves, obtained with the then state-of-the-art Mills spectrograph attached to the Lick 36-inch refractor, attained an impressive accuracy in the gamma velocities of these cepheids of about 100 m/s! His last paper on cepheid velocities was a joint publication in 1992, written when Jacobsen was more than 90 years old.
He also was a major contributor to the study of the ``level effect," a term applied to the fact that during the pulsation cycle, the radial velocity curves differ depending upon the spectral line formation depth within the cepheid atmospheres. The effect was recognized as a result of the passage of a running wave, again a manifestation of the pulsation phenomenon in cepheids.
Although the astronomy of stars was Jacobsen's main focus, he was a man of many interests. He had a love of the mountains, especially the nearby Cascade Range. He was especially fond of one-day hiking trips around and on the flanks of Mt Rainier, although he never attempted the strenuous climb to the summit. But some of the lesser summits of the Cascade range were among his trophies: Mt Hood in the late 40s, and Mt St. Helens in the 30s when because of its graceful symmetry, it was known as the ``Fujiyama of the West." He was also an accomplished pianist, his tastes running from Beethoven to the early romantics such as Schubert and Chopin. In many ways, his pianistic philosophy paralleled his personal attitudes about doing astronomy. For him, precision and clarity took precedence over lofty grand strategies. He was happy to make what he called modest additions to astronomical research, standing as it were, ``on the shoulders of others." Along with this, he would lament over, for example, how difficult it was to make the last movement of Beethoven's Op.27, No.2 clear---to make it effective, he would say, you have to pay attention to the details, just as doing good astronomy meant paying attention to the details.
Jacobsen married Evelyn Brandt a well-known Seattle piano teacher. They kept Welsh Corgi dogs, which they named for various famous astronomers. Theodor and Evelyn played together at facing grand pianos, sometimes works for duo piano, sometimes piano concertos with the orchestral part in piano transcription. All this came to an end in 1993 when Evelyn died after 40 years of marriage. They had no children.
Jacobsen remained interested in classical astronomy---that of the Greeks and Arabs---as a kind of hobby during his entire life. But it surprised some members of the UW astronomy faculty when they found, on visiting Jacobsen in his home in the mid-90s, an extensive manuscript that he had composed using modern mathematics to rederive the laws of planetary motions as conceived by the ancients using far more primitive means. With the help of these and other colleagues, he was able to publish, at the age of 98, a UW Press book entitled ``Planetary Systems from the Ancient Greeks to Kepler."
Publication: Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, v. 35, no. 5, p. 1467-1468, Pub Date: December 2003 Bibcode: 2003BAAS...35.1467K  
Jacobsen, Theodor Siegumfeldt (I12237)
 
40328 Occupation: Carpenter - Cabinets Weinberger, Anton (I391)
 
40329 occupation: Contractor Knudsen, Christian Jørgen (I358)
 
40330 Occupation: farm chores Hendriksen, Louis Frederick (I388)
 
40331 Océano Atlántico. Siemonsen, Christina Maria Jacobine (I13808)
 
40332 Océano Pacífico, Chiloé Province, Los Lagos, Chile (naufragio "Sulitelma"). Omkommet ved forlis med Sulitelma, sammen med tre døtre (evt. Jul 1905). Petersen, Johann Andreas Bernhard (I13805)
 
40333 Oct 1928, ved barns fødsel: Husmand.
FT 1930, Hundelev, Jelstrup, Vennebjerg, Hjørring: Jørgensen, Toftgaard, 1/2 1906 Vidstrup, Husfader (Viet) 1928, (Børn, afdøde) 1,0. Med ægtefælle Jørgensen, Mary (24/10 1907 Ajstrup, Husmoder), og Jørgensen, Jytte (31/8 1928 Hundelev, Datter), 
Jørgensen, Chresten Toftgaard (I162)
 
40334 Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. Nulevende (I376)
 
40335 Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. Nulevende (I18657)
 
40336 Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. Nulevende (I18411)
 
40337 Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. Nulevende (I15437)
 
40338 Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. Nulevende (I14959)
 
40339 Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. Nulevende (I8279)
 
40340 Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. Nulevende (I1540)
 
40341 Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. Nulevende (I185)
 
40342 Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. Nulevende (I376)
 
40343 Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. Nulevende (I82)
 
40344 Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. Nulevende (I11738)
 
40345 Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. Nulevende (I15126)
 
40346 Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. Nulevende (I15931)
 
40347 Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. Nulevende (I15927)
 
40348 Oct 27. Kiøbmand Nicolay Lehmejers Cathrina Elisabet Lehmejer, Cathrina Elisabet (I16146)
 
40349 October den 4de Jens Christensen af Broust og Ane Poulsdatter af Krogen ægteviede Familie: Jens Christensen / Ane Poulsdatter (F389)
 
40350 Oda Sophie Guldager f. Nathansen. Frederiksdalvej 139, Lyngby-Taarbæk. Enke e. snedkeremester Niels Peter Wilson Guldager. Gift i Kbhvn's mag 24/5 1910 ... Nathansen, Oda Sophie (I9564)
 

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